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Lucrezia Reichlin
By Lucrezia Reichlin - Feb 01,2024
LONDON — After reaching its highest level in decades in mid-2022, inflation in the United States and the eurozone fell sharply over the second half of last year.
By Lucrezia Reichlin - Aug 23,2023
LONDON — Headline inflation is falling fast in the United States and the eurozone, following a succession of sharp interest-rate hikes by the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank (ECB).
By Lucrezia Reichlin - Jul 23,2023
 LONDON — Last November, the European Commission proposed a radical reform of the European Union’s Stability and Growth Pact.
By Lucrezia Reichlin - Apr 17,2023
LONDON — Inflation’s return from the dead has brought the era of easy monetary policy to an end. The US Federal Reserve (Fed), the European Central Bank (ECB), and others are planning to shrink their balance sheets, but this is a process that will most likely unfold very slowly.
By Lucrezia Reichlin - Mar 19,2023
LONDON — Does Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse reveal a fundamental weakness in the current financial-stability framework, or does it merely point to a localised failure of supervision?By jeopardising many prominent, high-growth companies in the tech sector, the bank’s failure cert
By Lucrezia Reichlin - Nov 12,2022
LONDON  —  The rise of Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and her Fratelli d’Italia (“Brothers of Italy”), a party with roots in Mussolini’s Fascist movement, has raised more than a few concerns.
By Lucrezia Reichlin - Sep 18,2022
 ROME  —  Italy might soon be led, for the first time in its postwar history, by a party with roots in the detritus of Mussolini’s Fascist movement.
By Lucrezia Reichlin - Nov 16,2021
LONDON — This year’s United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP26) in Glasgow has brought a marked shift in focus from the responsibilities of governments to the power of the private sector.
By Lucrezia Reichlin - Aug 09,2020
BOLOGNA — As monetary and fiscal authorities have acted aggressively to blunt the COVID-19 pandemic’s economic impact, public debt and central-bank balance sheets have swelled rapidly.
By Lucrezia Reichlin - Mar 16,2020
LONDON — For years, fears have been mounting that a “black swan” would test the European Union’s crisis-management capabilities.

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