Satyajit Das, Columnist

The World Is Out of Weapons

At this point, a long period of stagnation is inevitable.

Not a bad place for it.

Photographer: Erwin Wodicka/Ullstein Bild/Getty Images
Lock
This article is for subscribers only.

No one likes to admit defeat. But global policymakers, who continue to insist that there's more they can do to revive growth and inflation, are starting to sound like Monty Python's Black Knight, the limbless and mortally wounded warrior who threatens to bleed on his victorious opponent. The truth is that governments and central banks have very few weapons left -- and have probably lost any chance they once had of averting a prolonged stagnation.

QuickTake Secular Stagnation