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In a new interview with Euromoney Magazine's Sid Verma, Harvard econ professor
We still have a great degree of deleveraging to endure in the US, and the issues around the world, particularly in Europe, are far from resolved.
She also slaps the Fed for muffing its taper roll-out, inadvertently roiling markets:
The Fed probably signaled more to the markets than it intended [in recent meetings]...The communication was problematic.
We all know how Reinhart feels about debt-to-GDP ratios (high ones should be avoided at all costs).
But she's actually been pretty neutral on the current spate of central bank dovishness.
In an interview with Der Spiegel in April, for instance, she said the banks' new role as defacto fiscal policy makers was probably a necessary evil:
I am not opposing this change, I am just stating it. You have to deal with the debt overhang one way or the other because the high debt levels are an impediment to growth, they paralyze the financial system and the credit process.
These new comments seem to push the needle beyond "acceptance" of easing into outright advocacy.