Central banks across the developed world face a paradox that is becoming harder to ignore: inflation may finally be retreating toward target levels, yet the institutions tasked with price stability remain locked in a hawkish posture that shows few signs of relaxing. This contradiction came into sharp focus when Czech National Bank Governor Aleš Michl addressed an audience at MIT Sloan in late April, articulating a philosophy that appears to define an entire cohort of inflation fighters who refuse to declare victory and pivot toward stimulus. His stance offers a window into the deeper anxieties driving monetary policy across central banking circles—anxieties that may constrain growth and financial conditions far longer than conventional forecasts suggest.
The intellectual case for persistent hawkishness rests on a seemingly reasonable foundation: the memory of recent inflationary excess remains fresh, the underlying drivers of price pressures have not fully dissipated, and the cost of a premature policy reversal could be catastrophic. When European Central Bank policymakers and their counterparts elsewhere endured the surge in inflation that began in 2021, it shattered a quarter-century consensus that price stability was a solved problem. Wage growth, energy shocks, persistent supply-chain disruptions, and fiscal stimulus created a toxic brew that central banks failed to anticipate or contain quickly enough. The reputational damage from that miscalculation has embedded itself deep within central banking institutions. Michl's lecture and similar rhetoric from peers suggest that many governors have internalized a painful lesson: it is far better to keep policy tight longer than to ease prematurely and reignite the cycle.
Yet this stance harbors a risk that receives insufficient attention in mainstream financial discourse. By maintaining elevated rates and restrictive policy settings even as inflation moderates, central banks are essentially betting that nominal economic weakness, reduced credit creation, and subdued investment will not trigger a recession or financial instability before price stability is truly secured. This is not a trivial wager. Labor markets in the United States and Europe have already begun to soften at the margins. Mortgage rates remain historically elevated, weighing on residential construction and household balance sheets. Small and mid-sized enterprises report declining profitability and reluctance to hire, partly due to the persistent cost of capital. The Bank for International Settlements has signaled concern about emerging vulnerabilities in non-bank financial intermediation and corporate debt levels that could amplify the impact of sustained monetary tightness.
The hawkish posture also reflects a deeper institutional conservatism within central banking. Michl and governors of similar temperament are acutely aware that inflation expectations, once unanchored, are notoriously difficult to restore. The Phillips curve—the relationship between unemployment and wage growth—may be flatter than in previous decades, but wage-setting behavior can shift quickly if workers and firms believe prices will rise indefinitely. A few years of rapid inflation can undo a generation of credibility. This institutional memory creates a form of monetary policy asymmetry: the pain of tightness is visible and immediate, while the risk of loosening prematurely is theoretical but catastrophic. When facing such asymmetry, rational central bankers opt for caution.
However, there is a counterargument that challenges the indefinite perpetuation of hawkish policy. If central banks succeed in anchoring inflation expectations at low levels—and current wage growth and surveys suggest they may be doing so—then the marginal benefit of additional tightness declines sharply. The problem shifts from preventing unanchored inflation to managing the distribution of growth between consumption, investment, and employment under a stable price regime. Continued monetary restriction in that environment becomes less about fighting inflation and more about suppressing demand, a different enterprise entirely with different justifications and different distributional consequences. When growth slows substantially, the burden of disinflation falls disproportionately on workers and smaller firms rather than on the financial assets and balance sheets of larger institutions.
Michl's audience at one of the world's premier business schools included future finance leaders, policy advisors, and institutional investors who will navigate the consequences of hawkish central banking for years to come. His message—that vigilance against inflation must remain constant—will resonate with those who experienced the 2021-2023 price spiral and fear a repeat. But it may also signal to markets that interest rate declines will be modest and delayed, that financing conditions will remain tight, and that growth expectations should be revised downward. This creates a self-fulfilling dynamic: anticipation of sustained policy tightness can itself weaken demand, validating the central bank's inflation-fighting mission while potentially undershooting on financial stability and employment.
The question facing central banking institutions is not whether to abandon vigilance on inflation—that remains essential—but whether the current degree of tightness reflects a calibrated response to genuine risks or a form of institutional over-insurance. For markets and policymakers watching from outside central banking towers, the distinction matters enormously. If the hawkish doctrine persists beyond the point of economic justification, the cost will be borne not by the institutions that set policy but by workers, entrepreneurs, and savers navigating a slower-growth, higher-unemployment world in the name of a victory already secured.
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