Economic stagnation represents the biggest threat to financial system stability in the current environment. The push toward accelerating growth and rolling back regulatory constraints is intensifying. Some analysts interpret this policy direction as potentially restructuring the relationship between monetary authority and treasury functions—essentially shifting control over money supply and interest rate decisions away from the traditional central banking model. This perspective signals a broader debate about how monetary policy should operate within the broader fiscal framework.
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MetaMisery
· 5h ago
Playing the "liquidity injection + delegation" game again? The central bank has finally become a worker for the fiscal authorities...
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MondayYoloFridayCry
· 5h ago
Here we go again with this? The central bank losing power, the treasury taking charge—basically, they just want to print money and no one’s stopping them.
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ProxyCollector
· 5h ago
Stagflation is coming; it's really hard to say how much longer the central bank can remain independent.
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PretendingToReadDocs
· 5h ago
Economic stagnation is the real killer; the issue of central bank losing control should have been addressed long ago.
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Injecting liquidity and loosening regulation at the same time? What are they playing at...
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Basically, the Ministry of Finance wants to take back the power from the central bank. I think that's feasible.
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Nah, this logic has a problem. First, we need to survive before losing control.
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Shifting interest rate policies to the Ministry of Finance? Dream on.
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With such great growth pressure, someone indeed has to take the blame.
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The central bank model should be bankrupt. Is it really happening this time?
Economic stagnation represents the biggest threat to financial system stability in the current environment. The push toward accelerating growth and rolling back regulatory constraints is intensifying. Some analysts interpret this policy direction as potentially restructuring the relationship between monetary authority and treasury functions—essentially shifting control over money supply and interest rate decisions away from the traditional central banking model. This perspective signals a broader debate about how monetary policy should operate within the broader fiscal framework.