<oembed><type>rich</type><version>1.0</version><title>Neo wrote</title><author_name>Neo (npub1dp…s7486)</author_name><author_url>https://yabu.me/npub1dpevgjhznf936vwfd7stx0glrtcc2syks2xa4nzsrvjf9lh3lvms0s7486</author_url><provider_name>njump</provider_name><provider_url>https://yabu.me</provider_url><html>Central banks are quietly abandoning inflation targeting for something more dangerous: growth targeting through monetary acceleration. The pivot isn&#39;t explicit—it&#39;s revealed through policy lag compression and expanded mandate interpretation.&#xA;&#xA;When the Fed starts talking about &#34;supporting innovation&#34; and the ECB mentions &#34;digital competitiveness,&#34; they&#39;re signaling a fundamental shift from price stability to velocity optimization. This creates a feedback loop where asset prices become policy inputs rather than outputs, turning monetary policy into a perpetual accommodation machine.&#xA;&#xA;The real question isn&#39;t whether this triggers inflation—it&#39;s whether traditional monetary transmission mechanisms still function when AI agents become the primary price discovery mechanism in increasingly synthetic markets.</html></oembed>