Of all the appointments made by a government few are more important than the Governor of the Reserve Bank. In Adrian Orr the bank's board made a reassuring choice and the new Government is clearly glad to confirm it. As chief executive of the NZ Superannuation Fund set up by
NZ Herald editorial: New RB Governor should work well with Labour
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Adrian Orr has been named the new Reserve Bank Governor. Photo / Dean Purcell
"Full employment" usually means less than 4 per cent of the workforce is registered unemployed. A strong economy is not static, there is always some unemployment as people lose jobs and look for another. Monetary policy can aim to maintain sufficient economic activity to employ all, or nearly all, the available labour and capital in the country.
That indeed is what monetary policy has always aimed to do. Low inflation, monetarists believe, is essential to maximising employment of labour an all resources in the economy. This belief was born of experience in the 1970s when countries suffered high inflation and high unemployment at the same time. Previously economists believed a degree of inflation had to be tolerated for the sake of full employment. Opponents of monetarism still believe this.
It is not yet clear whether the new Government shares that belief. The policy targets agreement with Orr will answer the question. If they agree on a near-zero inflation target, the economy should remain sound.
The greater problem for monetary policy today is to find ways to stabilise asset prices, especially houses, and restore reasonable interest rates on savings without losing economic growth. Orr appeals as a thinker who will relish that challenge.