Kiwi businesses, borrowers and savers should prepare for unprecedented uncertainty around monetary policy in the years ahead.
For more than 20 years, monetary policy has been off the political agenda and set in stone by the 1989 Reserve Bank Act. That truce ended this week at a parliamentary select committee hearing.
An emboldened group of Opposition leaders - including Labour finance spokesman David Parker, Green co-leader Russel Norman and NZ First leader Winston Peters - challenged Reserve Bank governor Graeme Wheeler's defence of the Reserve Bank Act.
The parties have been working together recently to call for an inquiry into the slump in manufacturing jobs, and for monetary policy changes to lower the NZ dollar. The Greens have even called on the Reserve Bank to print money to buy Government earthquake bonds to help finance the Christchurch rebuild.
This was Wheeler's first appearance before the Finance and Expenditure Select Committee, and it didn't go well. Wheeler had primed Opposition members with his October 26 speech, setting out his stance in favour of pure inflation targeting, a hands-off approach to the currency and a staunch opposition to money printing.