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How do we stop high inflation?

Rising prices are wreaking havoc in people鈥檚 lives around the world. Governments are scrambling to fix it, but there are no easy solutions.

Business leaders meeting this week at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, have warned that high levels of inflation are likely to cause a global recession, or worse. Financier George Soros told the annual gathering that ongoing coronavirus lockdowns in China mean 鈥済lobal inflation is liable to turn into global depression鈥. Meanwhile the head of the World Bank, David Malpass, told a business event in the US that given the rising cost of energy, food and fertiliser prompted by Russia鈥檚 invasion of Ukraine, it鈥檚 now difficult to 鈥渟ee how we avoid a recession鈥. Government and central bank spending aimed at cushioning the economic shock of the pandemic is also being blamed for the rising cost of goods and services. So, why have authorities so far failed to get rising inflation under control? If increased spending is contributing to prices going up, what can officials do to cushion the economic impact on the poorest without making things worse? And is another recession likely and perhaps even necessary?

Ritula Shah is joined by a panel of expert guests.
Producers: Ellen Otzen and Paul Schuster.

Available now

49 minutes

Last on

Sat 28 May 2022 14:06GMT

Contributors

Dr Andrew Sentance - A senior adviser to Cambridge Econometrics and previously a member of the Bank of England鈥檚 Monetary Policy Committee

Dr Linda Yueh - Fellow in Economics at St Edmund Hall, the University of Oxford, and author of The Great Economists: How Their Ideas Can Help Us Today

Vicky Pryce - Former joint head of the UK鈥檚 Government Economics Service and chief advisor to the Centre for Economics and Business Research (Cebr)

Also featuring 鈥

Professor Larry Summers - US Treasury Secretary during the Clinton administration and later Director of the National Economic Council in the Obama White House

Professor Shanta Devarajan - A Sri Lankan economist at Georgetown University, a former acting chief economist at the World Bank, now an advisor liaising between international financial institutions and the Sri Lankan government

Image

Customers shop in a Buenos Aires supermarket on May 23, 2022, as the Argentinian peso continues to devalue due to inflation 鈥 Credit: Reuters / Cristina Sille

Broadcasts

  • Fri 27 May 2022 09:06GMT
  • Fri 27 May 2022 23:06GMT
  • Sat 28 May 2022 03:06GMT
  • Sat 28 May 2022 14:06GMT

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