David Barkhausen
Communications
- Current Position
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Externals
- Fields of interest
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Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics,International Economics,Other Special Topics
- Education
- 2020
Doctoral studies in Political Sciences, Heidelberg University, Germany
- 2017-2020
MA in Political Science, study focus on International Relations and minoring in Economics, Heidelberg University, Germany
- 2018
Exchange semester, Paris School of International Affairs (PSIA), Sciences Po, Paris, France
- 2013-2017
BA in Politics and Economics, University of Münster, Germany
- 2015
Exchange semsester, Universitetet i Agder, Kristiansand, Norway
- 30 June 2025
- OCCASIONAL PAPER SERIES - No. 372Details
- Abstract
- This report focuses on the implications of the changed inflation environment for the ECB’s monetary policy strategy, including the lessons learned from both the low inflation and high inflation periods, and the transition from one to the other. The starting point of the report is the outcome of the Monetary Policy Strategy Review 2020-21. While the previous review was conducted in an economic environment of low inflation, with interest rates in proximity to the effective lower bound (ELB), the inflation surge that followed the COVID-19 pandemic underscores the importance of a monetary policy strategy that enables the Governing Council to effectively respond to major changes in the inflation environment.
- 20 June 2025
- THE ECB BLOGDetails
- JEL Code
- B29 : History of Economic Thought, Methodology, and Heterodox Approaches→History of Economic Thought since 1925→Other
- 2025
- Food EthicsNew Genetic Technologies (NGTs) as Mirrored by Mass Media - Topics and Frames of Genetic Editing in German Press
- 2025
- Journal of Common Market StudiesTrauma as a Tool: Hyperinflation Narratives in German Fiscal Policy Debates on European Monetary Integration
- 2025
- Journal of Economics and StatisticsThe German Inflation Trauma: Weimar’s Policy Lessons Between Persistence and Reconstruction
- 2023
- Zeitschrift für Angewandte LinguistikAufweichen, abbremsen, abschirmen – Wirtschaftsmetaphern zwischen politischer Abgrenzung und diskursiven Allgemeinplätzen