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Wikipedia

Quantitative easing

Quantitative easing (QE) is a monetary policy action where a central bank purchases predetermined amounts of government bonds or other financial assets in order to stimulate economic activity.[1] Quantitative easing is a novel form of monetary policy that came into wide application after the financial crisis of 2007‍–‍2008.[2][3] It is used to mitigate an economic recession when inflation is very low or negative, making standard monetary policy ineffective. Quantitative tightening (QT) does the opposite, where for monetary policy reasons, a central bank sells off some portion of its holdings of government bonds or other financial assets.

Similar to conventional open-market operations used to implement monetary policy, a central bank implements quantitative easing by buying financial assets from commercial banks and other financial institutions, thus raising the prices of those financial assets and lowering their yield, while simultaneously increasing the money supply. However, in contrast to normal policy, quantitative easing usually involves the purchase of riskier or longer-term assets (rather than short-term government bonds) of predetermined amounts at a large scale, over a pre-committed period of time.[4][5]

Central banks usually resort to quantitative easing when interest rates approach zero. Very low interest rates induce a liquidity trap, a situation where people prefer to hold cash or very liquid assets, given the low returns on other financial assets. This makes it difficult for interest rates to go below zero; monetary authorities may then use quantitative easing to stimulate the economy rather than trying to lower the interest rate.

Quantitative easing can help bring the economy out of recession[6] and help ensure that inflation does not fall below the central bank's inflation target.[7] However QE programmes are also criticized for their side-effects and risks, which include the policy being more effective than intended in acting against deflation (leading to higher inflation in the longer term), or not being effective enough if banks remain reluctant to lend and potential borrowers are unwilling to borrow. Quantitative easing has also been criticized for raising financial asset prices, contributing to inequality.[8] Quantitative easing was undertaken by some major central banks worldwide following the global financial crisis of 2007‍–‍2008, and again in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.[9]

Process and benefits edit

Standard central bank monetary policies are usually enacted by buying or selling government bonds on the open market to reach a desired target for the interbank interest rate. However, if a recession or depression continues even when a central bank has lowered interest rates targets to nearly zero, the central bank can no longer lower interest rates — a situation known as the liquidity trap. The central bank may then attempt to stimulate the economy by implementing quantitative easing, that is, by buying financial assets without reference to interest rates. This policy is sometimes described as a last resort to stimulate the economy.[10][11]

A central bank enacts quantitative easing by purchasing, regardless of interest rates, a predetermined quantity of bonds or other financial assets on financial markets from private financial institutions.[12][13] This action increases the excess reserves that banks hold. The goal of this policy is to ease financial conditions, increase market liquidity, and encourage private bank lending.

Quantitative easing affects the economy through several channels:[14]

  • Credit channel: By providing liquidity in the banking sector, QE makes it easier and cheaper for banks to extend loans to companies and households, thus stimulating credit growth. Additionally, if the central bank also purchases financial instruments that are riskier than government bonds (such as corporate bonds), it can also increase the price and lower the interest yield of these riskier assets.[citation needed]
  • Portfolio rebalancing: By enacting QE, the central bank withdraws an important part of the safe assets from the market onto its own balance sheet, which may result in private investors turning to other financial securities. Because of the relative lack of government bonds, investors are forced to "rebalance their portfolios" into other assets. Additionally, if the central bank also purchases financial instruments that are riskier than government bonds, it can also lower the interest yield of those assets (as those assets are more scarce in the market, and thus their prices go up correspondingly).[15]
  • Exchange rate: Because it increases the money supply and lowers the yield of financial assets, QE tends to depreciate a country's exchange rates relative to other currencies, through the interest rate mechanism.[16] Lower interest rates lead to a capital outflow from a country, thereby reducing foreign demand for a country's money, leading to a weaker currency. This increases demand for exports, and directly benefits exporters and export industries in the country.[citation needed]
  • Fiscal effect: By lowering yields on sovereign bonds, QE makes it cheaper for governments to borrow on financial markets, which may empower the government to provide fiscal stimulus to the economy. Quantitative easing can be viewed as a debt refinancing operation of the "consolidated government" (the government including the central bank), whereby the consolidated government, via the central bank, retires government debt securities and refinances them into central bank reserves.[citation needed]
  • Boosting asset prices: When a central bank buys government bonds from a pension fund, the pension fund, rather than hold on to this money, might invest it in financial assets, such as shares, that gives it a higher return. And when demand for financial assets is high, the value of these assets increases. This makes businesses and households holding shares wealthier – making them more likely to spend more, boosting economic activity.[citation needed]
  • Signalling effect: Some economists argue that QE's main impact is due to its effect on the psychology of the markets, by signaling that the central bank will take extraordinary measures to facilitate economic recovery. For instance, it has been observed that most of the effect of QE in the Eurozone on bond yields happened between the date of the announcement of QE and the actual start of the purchases by the ECB.[citation needed]

History edit

Quantitative Easing was proposed in a 1995 article in the Nikkei financial newspaper by Richard Werner, a German economist.[17] The Bank of Japan introduced QE from March 19, 2001, until March 2006, after having introduced negative interest rates in 1999. Most western central banks adopted similar policies in the aftermath of the great financial crisis of 2008.[18]

Precedents edit

A policy similar to quantitative easing had been implemented within the Roman Empire as a response to a financial crisis in 33 A.D.[19]

The US Federal Reserve belatedly implemented policies similar to the recent quantitative easing during the Great Depression of the 1930s.[20][21] Specifically, banks' excess reserves exceeded 6 percent in 1940, whereas they vanished during the entire postwar period until 2008.[22] Despite this fact, many commentators called the scope of the Federal Reserve quantitative easing program after the 2008 crisis "unprecedented".[23][24][25]

Japan (2001–2006) edit

A policy termed "quantitative easing" (量的緩和, ryōteki kanwa, from 量的 "quantitative" + 緩和 "easing")[26] was first used by the Bank of Japan (BoJ) to fight domestic deflation in the early 2000s.[27][28] The BOJ had maintained short-term interest rates at close to zero since 1999. The Bank of Japan had for many years, and as late as February 2001, stated that "quantitative easing ... is not effective" and rejected its use for monetary policy.[29]

The Bank of Japan adopted quantitative easing on 19 March 2001.[30][31] Under quantitative easing, the BOJ flooded commercial banks with excess liquidity to promote private lending, leaving them with large stocks of excess reserves and therefore little risk of a liquidity shortage.[32] The BOJ accomplished this by buying more government bonds than would be required to set the interest rate to zero. It later also bought asset-backed securities and equities and extended the terms of its commercial paper-purchasing operation.[33] The BOJ increased commercial bank current account balances from ¥5 trillion to ¥35 trillion (approximately US$300 billion) over a four-year period starting in March 2001. The BOJ also tripled the quantity of long-term Japan government bonds it could purchase on a monthly basis.[citation needed] However, the seven-fold increase notwithstanding, current account balances (essentially central bank reserves) being just one (usually relatively small) component of the liability side of a central bank's balance sheet (the main one being banknotes), the resulting peak increase in the BOJ's balance sheet was modest, compared to later actions by other central banks.[citation needed] The Bank of Japan phased out the QE policy in March 2006.[34]

After 2007 edit

After the financial crisis of 2007‍–‍2008, policies similar to those undertaken by Japan were used by the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Eurozone. Quantitative easing was used by these countries because their risk-free short-term nominal interest rates (termed the federal funds rate in the US, or the official bank rate in the UK) were either at or close to zero. According to Thomas Oatley, "QE has been the central pillar of post-crisis economic policy."[3]

During the peak of the financial crisis in 2008, the US Federal Reserve expanded its balance sheet dramatically by adding new assets and new liabilities without "sterilizing" these by corresponding subtractions. In the same period, the United Kingdom also used quantitative easing as an additional arm of its monetary policy to alleviate its financial crisis.[35][36][37]

United States edit

 
Federal Reserve holdings of treasury notes (blue) and mortgage-backed securities (red)
 
   10 Year Treasury Bond
   2 Year Treasury Bond
   3 month Treasury Bond
   Effective Federal Funds Rate
   CPI inflation year/year
  Recessions
 
(Percent change from a year earlier)
  CPI
  Core CPI

The U.S. Federal Reserve System held between $700 billion and $800 billion of Treasury notes on its balance sheet before the recession.

November 2008: QE1. In late November 2008, the Federal Reserve started buying $600 billion in mortgage-backed securities.[38] By March 2009, it held $1.75 trillion of bank debt, mortgage-backed securities, and Treasury notes; this amount reached a peak of $2.1 trillion in June 2010. Further purchases were halted as the economy started to improve, but resumed in August 2010 when the Fed decided the economy was not growing robustly. After the halt in June, holdings started falling naturally as debt matured and were projected to fall to $1.7 trillion by 2012. The Fed's revised goal became to keep holdings at $2.054 trillion. To maintain that level, the Fed bought $30 billion in two- to ten-year Treasury notes every month.[39]

November 2010: QE2. In November 2010, the Fed announced a second round of quantitative easing, buying $600 billion of Treasury securities by the end of the second quarter of 2011.[40][41] The expression "QE2" became a ubiquitous nickname in 2010, used to refer to this second round of quantitative easing by US central banks.[42] Retrospectively, the round of quantitative easing preceding QE2 was called "QE1".[43][44]

September 2012: QE3. A third round of quantitative easing, "QE3", was announced on 13 September 2012. In an 11–1 vote, the Federal Reserve decided to launch a new $40 billion per month, open-ended bond purchasing program of agency mortgage-backed securities. Additionally, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) announced that it would likely maintain the federal funds rate near zero "at least through 2015".[45][46] According to NASDAQ.com, this is effectively a stimulus program that allows the Federal Reserve to relieve $40 billion per month of commercial housing market debt risk.[47] Because of its open-ended nature, QE3 has earned the popular nickname of "QE-Infinity".[48][better source needed] On 12 December 2012, the FOMC announced an increase in the amount of open-ended purchases from $40 billion to $85 billion per month.[49]

On 19 June 2013, Ben Bernanke announced a "tapering" of some of the Fed's QE policies contingent upon continued positive economic data. Specifically, he said that the Fed could scale back its bond purchases from $85 billion to $65 billion a month during the upcoming September 2013 policy meeting.[50][51] He also suggested that the bond-buying program could wrap up by mid-2014.[52] While Bernanke did not announce an interest rate hike, he suggested that if inflation followed a 2% target rate and unemployment decreased to 6.5%, the Fed would likely start raising rates. The stock markets dropped by approximately 4.3% over the three trading days following Bernanke's announcement, with the Dow Jones dropping 659 points between 19 and 24 June, closing at 14,660 at the end of the day on 24 June.[53] On 18 September 2013, the Fed decided to hold off on scaling back its bond-buying program,[54] and announced in December 2013 that it would begin to taper its purchases in January 2014.[55] Purchases were halted on 29 October 2014[56] after accumulating $4.5 trillion in assets.[57]

March 2020: QE4.

 
Increase in US Federal Reserve assets in response to COVID-19 pandemic[58]

The Federal Reserve began conducting its fourth quantitative easing operation since the 2008 financial crisis; on 15 March 2020, it announced approximately $700 billion in new quantitative easing via asset purchases to support US liquidity in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.[59] As of mid-summer 2020 this resulted in an additional $2 trillion in assets on the books of the Federal Reserve.[60]

United Kingdom edit

 
Immediate and delayed effects of quantitative easing[61]

The Bank of England's QE programme commenced in March 2009, when it purchased around £165 billion in assets as of September 2009 and around £175 billion in assets by the end of October 2009.[62] Five further tranches of bond purchases between 2009 and November 2020 brought the peak QE total to £895 billion.[63]

The Bank imposed a number of constraints on the QE policy, namely, that it would not buy more than 70% of any issue of government debt; and that it would only buy traditional (non-index-linked) debt, with a maturity of more than three years.[64] Originally, the bonds eligible for purchase were limited to UK government debt, but this was later relaxed to include high quality commercial bonds.[65]

QE was primarily designed as an instrument of monetary policy. The mechanism required the Bank of England to purchase government bonds on the secondary market, financed by the creation of new central bank money. This would have the effect of increasing the asset prices of the bonds purchased, thereby lowering yields and dampening longer term interest rates and making it cheaper for businesses to raise capital.[66] The aim of the policy was initially to ease liquidity constraints in the sterling reserves system, but evolved into a wider policy to provide economic stimulus. Another side effect is that investors will switch to other investments, such as shares, boosting their price and thus encouraging consumption.[67] In 2012 the Bank estimated that quantitative easing had benefited households differentially according to the assets they hold; richer households have more assets.[68]

In February 2022 the Bank of England announced its intention to commence winding down the QE portfolio.[69] Initially this would be achieved by not replacing tranches of maturing bonds, and would later be accelerated through active bond sales.

In August 2022 the Bank of England reiterated its intention to accelerate the QE wind down through active bond sales. This policy was affirmed in an exchange of letters between the Bank of England and the UK Chancellor of the Exchequer in September 2022.[70] Between February 2022 and September 2022, a total of £37.1bn of government bonds matured, reducing the outstanding stock from £875.0bn at the end of 2021 to £837.9bn. In addition, a total of £1.1bn of corporate bonds matured, reducing the stock from £20.0bn to £18.9bn, with sales of the remaining stock planned to begin on 27 September.

On 28 September 2022 the Bank of England issued a Market Notice announcing its intention to "carry out purchases of long dated gilts in a temporary and targeted way".[71] This was in response to market conditions in which the sterling exchange rate and bond asset pricing were significantly disrupted following a UK government fiscal statement.[72] The Bank stated its announcement would apply to conventional gilts of residual maturity greater than 20 years in the secondary market. The existing constraints applicable to QE bond purchases would continue to apply. The funding of the purchases would be met from central bank reserves, but would be segregated in a different portfolio from existing asset purchases. The Bank also announced that its annual £80bn target to reduce the existing QE portfolio remained unchanged but, in the light of current market conditions, the beginning of gilt sale operations would be postponed to 31 October 2022.[73]

Eurozone edit

The European Central Bank engaged in large-scale purchase of covered bonds in May 2009,[74] and purchased around €250 billion worth of sovereign bonds from targeted member states in 2010 and 2011 (the SMP Programme). However, until 2015 the ECB refused to openly admit they were doing quantitative easing.[citation needed]

In a dramatic change of policy, following the new Jackson Hole Consensus, on 22 January 2015 Mario Draghi, President of the European Central Bank, announced an "expanded asset purchase programme", where €60 billion per month of euro-area bonds from central governments, agencies and European institutions would be bought.[75]

Beginning in March 2015, the stimulus was planned to last until September 2016 at the earliest with a total QE of at least €1.1 trillion. Mario Draghi announced the programme would continue: "until we see a continued adjustment in the path of inflation", referring to the ECB's need to combat the growing threat of deflation across the eurozone in early 2015.[76][77]

In March 2016, the ECB increased its monthly bond purchases to €80 billion from €60 billion and started to include corporate bonds under the asset purchasing programme and announced new ultra-cheap four-year loans to banks. From November 2019, the ECB resumed buying up eurozone government bonds at a rate of €20 billion in an effort to encourage governments to borrow more and spend in domestic investment projects.[78] In March 2020, to help the economy absorb the shock of the COVID-19 crisis, the ECB announced a €750 billion Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme (PEPP).[79] The aim of the stimulus package (PEPP) was to lower borrowing costs and increase lending in the euro area.[80]

Switzerland edit

At the beginning of 2013, the Swiss National Bank had the largest balance sheet relative to the size of its economy. It was responsible for, at close to 100% of Switzerland's national output. A total of 12% of its reserves were in foreign equities. By contrast, the US Federal Reserve's holdings equalled about 20% of US GDP, while the European Central Bank's assets were worth 30% of GDP.[81]

The SNB's balance sheet has increased massively due to its QE programme, to the extent that in December 2020, the US treasury accused Switzerland of being a "currency manipulator". The US administration recommended Switzerland to increase the retirement age for Swiss workers to reduce saving assets by the Swiss Social Security administration, in order to boost domestic demand and reduce the necessity to maintain QE to stabilize the parity between the dollar and the Swiss franc.[82]

Sweden edit

Sveriges Riksbank launched quantitative easing in February 2015, announcing government bond purchases of nearly US$1.2 billion.[83] The annualised inflation rate in January 2015 was -0.3%, and the bank implied that Sweden's economy could slide into deflation.[83]

Japan after 2007 and Abenomics edit

In early October 2010, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) announced that it would examine the purchase of ¥5 trillion (US$60 billion) in assets. This was an attempt to push down the value of the yen against the US dollar to stimulate the domestic economy by making Japanese exports cheaper; however, it was ineffective.[84]

On 4 August 2011 the BOJ announced a unilateral move to increase the commercial bank current account balance from ¥40 trillion (US$504 billion) to a total of ¥50 trillion (US$630 billion).[85][86] In October 2011, the bank expanded its asset purchase program by ¥5 trillion ($66bn) to a total of ¥55 trillion.[87]

On 4 April 2013, the Bank of Japan announced that it would expand its asset purchase program by ¥60 trillion to ¥70 trillion per year.[88] The bank hoped to banish deflation and achieve an inflation rate of 2% within two years. This would be achieved through a QE programme worth US$1.4 trillion, an amount so large it is expected to double the money supply.[89] This policy has been named Abenomics, a portmanteau of economic policies from Shinzō Abe, the former Prime Minister of Japan.

On 31 October 2014, the BOJ announced the expansion of its bond buying program, to purchase ¥80 trillion of bonds a year.[90]

In addition to purchases of bonds, Governor Masaaki Shirakawa also directed the BOJ to begin purchasing corporate shares as well as debt securities in October 2010. The BOJ came up with a policy to purchase index ETFs as part of the 2010 Comprehensive Monetary Easing program, which initially placed a cap of ¥450 billion shares with a termination in December 2011. However, later Governor Haruhiko Kuroda replaced the program with the Quantitative and Qualitative Monetary Easing policy which empowered the BOJ to buy ETFs with no cap or termination date, with an increased annual target of ¥1 trillion. The cap was raised multiple times to over ¥19 trillion by March 2018. And in March 16, 2020, following the Covid pandemic, the BOJ doubled its annual ETF purchase target to ¥12 trillion.[91]

Effectiveness of QE edit

The effectiveness of quantitative easing is the subject of an intense dispute among researchers as it is difficult to separate the effect of quantitative easing from other contemporaneous economic and policy measures, such as negative rates.

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan calculated that as of July 2012, there was "very little impact on the economy".[92] Bank deposits in the Fed increased by nearly $4 trillion during QE1-3, closely tracking Fed bond purchases. A different assessment has been offered by Federal Reserve Governor Jeremy Stein, who has said that measures of quantitative easing such as large-scale asset purchases "have played a significant role in supporting economic activity".[93]

While the literature on the topic has grown over time, it has also been shown that central banks' own research on the effectiveness of quantitative easing tends to be optimistic in comparison to research by independent researchers,[94] which could indicate a conflict of interest or cognitive bias in central bank research.

Several studies published in the aftermath of the crisis found that quantitative easing in the US has effectively contributed to lower long term interest rates on a variety of securities as well as lower credit risk. This boosted GDP growth and modestly increased inflation.[95][96][97][98][99][100] A predictable but unintended consequence of the lower interest rates was to drive investment capital into equities, thereby inflating the value of equities relative to the value of goods and services, and increasing the wealth gap between the wealthy and working class.

In the Eurozone, studies have shown that QE successfully averted deflationary spirals in 2013–2014, and prevented the widening of bond yield spreads between member states.[101] QE also helped reduce bank lending cost.[102] However, the real effect of QE on GDP and inflation remained modest[103][104] and very heterogeneous depending on methodologies used in research studies, which find on GDP comprised between 0.2% and 1.5% and between 0.1 and 1.4% on inflation. Model-based studies tend to find a higher impact than empirical ones.[citation needed]

In Japan, focusing on equity purchases, studies have shown that QE successfully boosted stock prices,[105][91] but appear to have not been successful in stimulating corporate investment.[91]

Risks and side-effects edit

Quantitative easing may cause higher inflation than desired if the amount of easing required is overestimated and too much money is created by the purchase of liquid assets.[106] On the other hand, QE can fail to spur demand if banks remain reluctant to lend money to businesses and households. Even then, QE can still ease the process of deleveraging as it lowers yields. However, there is a time lag between monetary growth and inflation; inflationary pressures associated with money growth from QE could build before the central bank acts to counter them.[107] Inflationary risks are mitigated if the system's economy outgrows the pace of the increase of the money supply from the easing.[citation needed] If production in an economy increases because of the increased money supply, the value of a unit of currency may also increase, even though there is more currency available. For example, if a nation's economy were to spur a significant increase in output at a rate at least as high as the amount of debt monetized the inflationary pressures would be equalized. This can only happen if member banks actually lend the excess money out instead of hoarding the extra cash.[citation needed] During times of high economic output, the central bank always has the option of restoring reserves to higher levels through raising interest rates or other means, effectively reversing the easing steps taken.

Economists such as John Taylor[108] believe that quantitative easing creates unpredictability. Since the increase in bank reserves may not immediately increase the money supply if held as excess reserves, the increased reserves create the danger that inflation may eventually result when the reserves are loaned out.[109]

QE benefits debtors; since the interest rate has fallen, there is less money to be repaid. However, it directly harms creditors as they earn less money from lower interest rates. Devaluation of a currency also directly harms importers and consumers, as the cost of imported goods is inflated by the devaluation of the currency.[110]

Impact on savings and pensions edit

In the European Union, World Pensions Council (WPC) financial economists have also argued that artificially low government bond interest rates induced by QE will have an adverse impact on the underfunding condition of pension funds, since "without returns that outstrip inflation, pension investors face the real value of their savings declining rather than ratcheting up over the next few years".[111][112] In addition to this, low or negative interest rates create disincentives for saving.[113] In a way this is an intended effect, since QE is intended to spur consumer spending.

Effects on climate change edit

In Europe, central banks operating corporate quantitative easing (i.e., QE programmes that include corporate bonds) such as the European Central Bank or the Swiss National Bank, have been increasingly criticized by NGOs[114] for not taking into account the climate impact of the companies issuing the bonds.[115][116][117][118] In effect, Corporate QE programmes are perceived as indirect subsidy to polluting companies. The European Parliament has also joined the criticism by adopting several resolutions on the matter, and has repeatedly called on the ECB to reflect climate change considerations in its policies.[119][120]

Central banks have usually responded by arguing they had to follow the principle of "market neutrality"[121] and should therefore refrain from making discretionary choices when selecting bonds on the market. The notion that central banks can be market neutral is contested, as central banks always make choices that are not neutral for financial markets when implementing monetary policy.[122] Furthermore, research has demonstrated that, in the case of the ECB's corporate bond purchase programme, the principle of market neutrality is not a practical reality, as the ECB's purchases are concentrated on economic sectors that are not representative of the wider economy, and tend to be skewed towards carbon-intensive firms.[123]

Following this criticism, in 2020, several top level ECB policymaker such as Christine Lagarde,[124] Isabel Schnabel, Frank Elderson[125] and others have pointed out the contradiction in the market neutrality logic. In particular, Schnabel argued that "In the presence of market failures, market neutrality may not be the appropriate benchmark for a central bank when the market by itself is not achieving efficient outcomes"[126]

Since 2020, several central banks (including the ECB, Bank of England and the Swedish central banks) have announced their intention to incorporate climate criteria in their QE programmes.[127] The Network for Greening the Financial System has identified different possible measures to align central banks' collateral frameworks and QE with climate objectives.[128]

Increased income and wealth inequality edit

Critics frequently point to the redistributive effects of quantitative easing. For instance, British Prime Minister Theresa May openly criticized QE in July 2016 for its regressive effects: "Monetary policy – in the form of super-low interest rates and quantitative easing – has helped those on the property ladder at the expense of those who can't afford to own their own home."[129] Dhaval Joshi of BCA Research wrote that "QE cash ends up overwhelmingly in profits, thereby exacerbating already extreme income inequality and the consequent social tensions that arise from it".[130] Anthony Randazzo of the Reason Foundation wrote that QE "is fundamentally a regressive redistribution program that has been boosting wealth for those already engaged in the financial sector or those who already own homes, but passing little along to the rest of the economy. It is a primary driver of income inequality".[130]

Those criticisms are partly based on some evidence provided by central banks themselves. In 2012, a Bank of England report[131] showed that its quantitative easing policies had benefited mainly the wealthy, and that 40% of those gains went to the richest 5% of British households.[130][132]

In May 2013, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas President Richard Fisher said that cheap money has made rich people richer, but has not done quite as much for working Americans.[133]

Answering similar criticisms expressed by MEP Molly Scott Cato, the President of the ECB Mario Draghi once declared:[134]

Some of these policies may, on the one hand, increase inequality but, on the other hand, if we ask ourselves what the major source of inequality is, the answer would be unemployment. So, to the extent that these policies help – and they are helping on that front – then certainly an accommodative monetary policy is better in the present situation than a restrictive monetary policy.

In July 2018, the ECB published a study[135] showing that its QE programme increased the net wealth of the poorest fifth of the population by 2.5 percent, compared with just 1.0 percent for the richest fifth. The study's credibility was however contested.[136][137]

International spillovers for BRICs and emerging economies edit

Quantitative easing (QE) policies can have a profound effect on Forex rates, since it changes the supply of one currency compared to another. For instance, if both the US and Europe are using quantitative easing to the same degree then the currency pair of US/EUR may not fluctuate. However, if the US treasury uses QE to a higher degree, as evidenced in the increased purchase of securities during an economic crisis, but India does not, then the value of the USD will decrease relative to the Indian rupee. As a result, quantitative easing has the same effect as purchasing foreign currencies, effectively manipulating the value of one currency compared to another.[138][139]

BRIC countries have criticized the QE carried out by the central banks of developed nations. They share the argument that such actions amount to protectionism and competitive devaluation. As net exporters whose currencies are partially pegged to the dollar, they protest that QE causes inflation to rise in their countries and penalizes their industries.[140][141][142][143]

In a joint statement leaders of Russia, Brazil, India, China and South Africa, collectively BRICS, have condemned the policies of western economies saying "It is critical for advanced economies to adopt responsible macro-economic and financial policies, avoid creating excessive liquidity and undertake structural reforms to lift growth" as written in the Telegraph.[144]

According to Bloomberg reporter David Lynch, the new money from quantitative easing could be used by the banks to invest in emerging markets, commodity-based economies, commodities themselves, and non-local opportunities rather than to lend to local businesses that are having difficulty getting loans.[145]

Moral hazard edit

Another criticism prevalent in Europe,[146] is that QE creates moral hazard for governments. Central banks’ purchases of government securities artificially depress the cost of borrowing. Normally, governments issuing additional debt see their borrowing costs rise, which discourages them from overdoing it. In particular, market discipline in the form of higher interest rates will cause a government like Italy's, tempted to increase deficit spending, to think twice. Not so, however, when the central bank acts as bond buyer of last resort and is prepared to purchase government securities without limit. In such circumstances, market discipline will be incapacitated.

Reputational risks edit

Richard W. Fisher, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, warned in 2010 that QE carries "the risk of being perceived as embarking on the slippery slope of debt monetization. We know that once a central bank is perceived as targeting government debt yields[113] at a time of persistent budget deficits, concern about debt monetization quickly arises." Later in the same speech, he stated that the Fed is monetizing the government debt: "The math of this new exercise is readily transparent: The Federal Reserve will buy $110 billion a month in Treasuries, an amount that, annualized, represents the projected deficit of the federal government for next year. For the next eight months, the nation's central bank will be monetizing the federal debt."[147]

Ben Bernanke remarked in 2002 that the US government had a technology called the printing press (or, today, its electronic equivalent), so that if rates reached zero and deflation threatened, the government could always act to ensure deflation was prevented. He said, however, that the government would not print money and distribute it "willy nilly" but would rather focus its efforts in certain areas (e.g., buying federal agency debt securities and mortgage-backed securities).[148][149]

According to economist Robert McTeer, former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, there is nothing wrong with printing money during a recession, and quantitative easing is different from traditional monetary policy "only in its magnitude and pre-announcement of amount and timing".[4][5]

Effects on stock market prices edit

The effects of quantitative easing on the stock market are always present. The stock market reacts to nearly all updates regarding the Federal Reserve's actions. It tends to experience an upswing following announcements of expansionary policies and a downturn following announcements of contractionary policies.[150] Although there is no certain outcome, available evidence points to a positive correlation between quantitative easing policies and upward trends in the stock market.[151] Some of the most significant increases in the U.S. stock market indices have coincided with the implementation of quantitative easing measures. The most recent example would be the Federal Reserve's policies during the COVID-19 pandemic. The urgent need to stimulate the economy required a large influx of new liquidity, which has been achieved by quantitative easing. This liquidity was lent by banks to enterprises, stimulating their expansion and inflating sales, which led investors to anticipate growth in company revenues, leading to increased stock purchases.[152]

Conversely, the post COVID-19 economy, which faced increased inflation due to excessive quantitative easing, has been addressed through quantitative tightening measures. During this period, stocks experienced a downward shift. Investors thus favor the idea of increasing asset values during initial inflationary periods. However, it's more probable that confidence grows due to the anticipation of a healthier economy following expansionary measures and decreases when opposite measures are put in place.[153]

Alternative policies edit

QE for the people edit

In response to concerns that QE is failing to create sufficient demand, particularly in the Eurozone, some have called for "QE for the people" or "helicopter money". Instead of buying government bonds or other securities by creating bank reserves, as the Federal Reserve and Bank of England have done, some suggest that central banks could make payments directly to households (in a similar fashion as Milton Friedman's helicopter money).[154]

Economists Mark Blyth and Eric Lonergan argue in Foreign Affairs that this is the most effective solution for the Eurozone, particularly given the restrictions on fiscal policy.[155] They argue that based on the evidence from tax rebates in the United States, less than 5% of GDP transferred by the ECB to the household sector in the Eurozone would suffice to generate a recovery, a fraction of what it intends to be done under standard QE. Oxford economist John Muellbauer has suggested that this could be legally implemented using the electoral register.[156]

On 27 March 2015, 19 economists including Steve Keen, Ann Pettifor, Robert Skidelsky, and Guy Standing have signed a letter to the Financial Times calling on the European Central Bank to adopt a more direct approach to its quantitative easing plan announced earlier in February.[157] In August 2019, prominent central bankers Stanley Fischer and Philip Hildebrand co-authored a paper published by BlackRock in which they propose a form of helicopter money.[158]

Carbon quantitative easing edit

Carbon quantitative easing (CQE) is an untested form of QE that is featured in a newly proposed international climate policy, called a global carbon reward.[159][160][161] A major goal of CQE is to finance the global carbon reward by managing the exchange rate of a new representative currency, called a carbon currency. The carbon currency will act as an international unit of account and a store of value, because it will represent the mass of carbon that is mitigated and rewarded under the global carbon reward policy.

Fiscal policy edit

Keynesian economics became popular after the Great Depression. The idea is that in an economy with low inflation and high unemployment (especially technological unemployment), demand side economics will stimulate consumer spending, which increases business profits, which increases investment. Keynesians promote methods like public works, infrastructure redevelopment, and increases in the social safety net to increase demand and inflation.

Monetary financing edit

Quantitative easing has been nicknamed "money printing" by some members of the media,[162][163][164] central bankers,[165] and financial analysts.[166][167]

However, QE is a very different form of money creation than it is commonly understood when talking about "money printing" (otherwise called monetary financing or debt monetization). Indeed, with QE the newly created money is usually used to buy financial assets beyond just government bonds[162] (corporate bonds etc.) and QE is usually implemented in the secondary market. In most developed nations (e.g., the United Kingdom, the United States, Japan, and the Eurozone), central banks are prohibited from buying government debt directly from the government and must instead buy it from the secondary market.[168][169] This two-step process, where the government sells bonds to private entities that in turn sell them to the central bank, has been called "monetizing the debt" by many analysts.[168]

The distinguishing characteristic between QE and debt monetization is that with the former, the central bank creates money to stimulate the economy, not to finance government spending (although an indirect effect of QE is to lower rates on sovereign bonds). Also, the central bank has the stated intention of reversing the QE when the economy has recovered (by selling the government bonds and other financial assets back into the market).[162] The only effective way to determine whether a central bank has monetized debt is to compare its performance relative to its stated objectives. Many central banks have adopted an inflation target. It is likely that a central bank is monetizing the debt if it continues to buy government debt when inflation is above target and if the government has problems with debt financing.[168]

Some economists such as Adair Turner have argued that outright monetary financing would be more effective than QE.[170][171]

Neo-Fisherism edit

Neo-Fisherism, based on theories made by Irving Fisher reasons that the solution to low inflation is not quantitative easing, but paradoxically to increase interest rates. This is due to the fact that if interest rates continue to decline, banks will lose customers and less money will be invested back into the economy.

In a situation of low inflation and high debt, customers will feel more secure holding on to cash or converting cash into commodities, which fails to stimulate economic growth. If the money supply increases from quantitative easing, customers will subsequently default in the face of higher prices, thus resetting the low inflation and worsening the low inflation issue.[172][173]

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Interactive chart of the assets on Federal Reserve's balance sheet.
  • Deflation: Making Sure "It" Doesn't Happen Here, 2002 speech by Ben Bernanke on deflation and the utility of quantitative easing
  • Money creation in the modern economy - Bank of England Document Explaining How Money Is Created and Destroyed
  • Quantitative easing explained (Financial Times Europe)
  • A Fed Governor Discusses Quantitative Easing Among Other Topics

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Quantitative easing QE is a monetary policy action where a central bank purchases predetermined amounts of government bonds or other financial assets in order to stimulate economic activity 1 Quantitative easing is a novel form of monetary policy that came into wide application after the financial crisis of 2007 2008 2 3 It is used to mitigate an economic recession when inflation is very low or negative making standard monetary policy ineffective Quantitative tightening QT does the opposite where for monetary policy reasons a central bank sells off some portion of its holdings of government bonds or other financial assets Similar to conventional open market operations used to implement monetary policy a central bank implements quantitative easing by buying financial assets from commercial banks and other financial institutions thus raising the prices of those financial assets and lowering their yield while simultaneously increasing the money supply However in contrast to normal policy quantitative easing usually involves the purchase of riskier or longer term assets rather than short term government bonds of predetermined amounts at a large scale over a pre committed period of time 4 5 Central banks usually resort to quantitative easing when interest rates approach zero Very low interest rates induce a liquidity trap a situation where people prefer to hold cash or very liquid assets given the low returns on other financial assets This makes it difficult for interest rates to go below zero monetary authorities may then use quantitative easing to stimulate the economy rather than trying to lower the interest rate Quantitative easing can help bring the economy out of recession 6 and help ensure that inflation does not fall below the central bank s inflation target 7 However QE programmes are also criticized for their side effects and risks which include the policy being more effective than intended in acting against deflation leading to higher inflation in the longer term or not being effective enough if banks remain reluctant to lend and potential borrowers are unwilling to borrow Quantitative easing has also been criticized for raising financial asset prices contributing to inequality 8 Quantitative easing was undertaken by some major central banks worldwide following the global financial crisis of 2007 2008 and again in response to the COVID 19 pandemic 9 Contents 1 Process and benefits 2 History 2 1 Precedents 2 2 Japan 2001 2006 2 3 After 2007 2 3 1 United States 2 3 2 United Kingdom 2 3 3 Eurozone 2 3 4 Switzerland 2 3 5 Sweden 2 3 6 Japan after 2007 and Abenomics 3 Effectiveness of QE 4 Risks and side effects 4 1 Impact on savings and pensions 4 2 Effects on climate change 4 3 Increased income and wealth inequality 4 4 International spillovers for BRICs and emerging economies 4 5 Moral hazard 4 6 Reputational risks 4 7 Effects on stock market prices 5 Alternative policies 5 1 QE for the people 5 2 Carbon quantitative easing 5 3 Fiscal policy 5 4 Monetary financing 5 5 Neo Fisherism 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksProcess and benefits editSee also Monetary policy Standard central bank monetary policies are usually enacted by buying or selling government bonds on the open market to reach a desired target for the interbank interest rate However if a recession or depression continues even when a central bank has lowered interest rates targets to nearly zero the central bank can no longer lower interest rates a situation known as the liquidity trap The central bank may then attempt to stimulate the economy by implementing quantitative easing that is by buying financial assets without reference to interest rates This policy is sometimes described as a last resort to stimulate the economy 10 11 A central bank enacts quantitative easing by purchasing regardless of interest rates a predetermined quantity of bonds or other financial assets on financial markets from private financial institutions 12 13 This action increases the excess reserves that banks hold The goal of this policy is to ease financial conditions increase market liquidity and encourage private bank lending Quantitative easing affects the economy through several channels 14 Credit channel By providing liquidity in the banking sector QE makes it easier and cheaper for banks to extend loans to companies and households thus stimulating credit growth Additionally if the central bank also purchases financial instruments that are riskier than government bonds such as corporate bonds it can also increase the price and lower the interest yield of these riskier assets citation needed Portfolio rebalancing By enacting QE the central bank withdraws an important part of the safe assets from the market onto its own balance sheet which may result in private investors turning to other financial securities Because of the relative lack of government bonds investors are forced to rebalance their portfolios into other assets Additionally if the central bank also purchases financial instruments that are riskier than government bonds it can also lower the interest yield of those assets as those assets are more scarce in the market and thus their prices go up correspondingly 15 Exchange rate Because it increases the money supply and lowers the yield of financial assets QE tends to depreciate a country s exchange rates relative to other currencies through the interest rate mechanism 16 Lower interest rates lead to a capital outflow from a country thereby reducing foreign demand for a country s money leading to a weaker currency This increases demand for exports and directly benefits exporters and export industries in the country citation needed Fiscal effect By lowering yields on sovereign bonds QE makes it cheaper for governments to borrow on financial markets which may empower the government to provide fiscal stimulus to the economy Quantitative easing can be viewed as a debt refinancing operation of the consolidated government the government including the central bank whereby the consolidated government via the central bank retires government debt securities and refinances them into central bank reserves citation needed Boosting asset prices When a central bank buys government bonds from a pension fund the pension fund rather than hold on to this money might invest it in financial assets such as shares that gives it a higher return And when demand for financial assets is high the value of these assets increases This makes businesses and households holding shares wealthier making them more likely to spend more boosting economic activity citation needed Signalling effect Some economists argue that QE s main impact is due to its effect on the psychology of the markets by signaling that the central bank will take extraordinary measures to facilitate economic recovery For instance it has been observed that most of the effect of QE in the Eurozone on bond yields happened between the date of the announcement of QE and the actual start of the purchases by the ECB citation needed History editQuantitative Easing was proposed in a 1995 article in the Nikkei financial newspaper by Richard Werner a German economist 17 The Bank of Japan introduced QE from March 19 2001 until March 2006 after having introduced negative interest rates in 1999 Most western central banks adopted similar policies in the aftermath of the great financial crisis of 2008 18 Precedents edit A policy similar to quantitative easing had been implemented within the Roman Empire as a response to a financial crisis in 33 A D 19 The US Federal Reserve belatedly implemented policies similar to the recent quantitative easing during the Great Depression of the 1930s 20 21 Specifically banks excess reserves exceeded 6 percent in 1940 whereas they vanished during the entire postwar period until 2008 22 Despite this fact many commentators called the scope of the Federal Reserve quantitative easing program after the 2008 crisis unprecedented 23 24 25 Japan 2001 2006 edit A policy termed quantitative easing 量的緩和 ryōteki kanwa from 量的 quantitative 緩和 easing 26 was first used by the Bank of Japan BoJ to fight domestic deflation in the early 2000s 27 28 The BOJ had maintained short term interest rates at close to zero since 1999 The Bank of Japan had for many years and as late as February 2001 stated that quantitative easing is not effective and rejected its use for monetary policy 29 The Bank of Japan adopted quantitative easing on 19 March 2001 30 31 Under quantitative easing the BOJ flooded commercial banks with excess liquidity to promote private lending leaving them with large stocks of excess reserves and therefore little risk of a liquidity shortage 32 The BOJ accomplished this by buying more government bonds than would be required to set the interest rate to zero It later also bought asset backed securities and equities and extended the terms of its commercial paper purchasing operation 33 The BOJ increased commercial bank current account balances from 5 trillion to 35 trillion approximately US 300 billion over a four year period starting in March 2001 The BOJ also tripled the quantity of long term Japan government bonds it could purchase on a monthly basis citation needed However the seven fold increase notwithstanding current account balances essentially central bank reserves being just one usually relatively small component of the liability side of a central bank s balance sheet the main one being banknotes the resulting peak increase in the BOJ s balance sheet was modest compared to later actions by other central banks citation needed The Bank of Japan phased out the QE policy in March 2006 34 After 2007 edit After the financial crisis of 2007 2008 policies similar to those undertaken by Japan were used by the United States the United Kingdom and the Eurozone Quantitative easing was used by these countries because their risk free short term nominal interest rates termed the federal funds rate in the US or the official bank rate in the UK were either at or close to zero According to Thomas Oatley QE has been the central pillar of post crisis economic policy 3 During the peak of the financial crisis in 2008 the US Federal Reserve expanded its balance sheet dramatically by adding new assets and new liabilities without sterilizing these by corresponding subtractions In the same period the United Kingdom also used quantitative easing as an additional arm of its monetary policy to alleviate its financial crisis 35 36 37 United States edit nbsp Federal Reserve holdings of treasury notes blue and mortgage backed securities red nbsp 30 year mortgage average 30 Year Treasury Bond 10 Year Treasury Bond 2 Year Treasury Bond 3 month Treasury Bond Effective Federal Funds Rate CPI inflation year year Recessions nbsp Percent change from a year earlier M2 money supply CPI Core CPI The U S Federal Reserve System held between 700 billion and 800 billion of Treasury notes on its balance sheet before the recession November 2008 QE1 In late November 2008 the Federal Reserve started buying 600 billion in mortgage backed securities 38 By March 2009 it held 1 75 trillion of bank debt mortgage backed securities and Treasury notes this amount reached a peak of 2 1 trillion in June 2010 Further purchases were halted as the economy started to improve but resumed in August 2010 when the Fed decided the economy was not growing robustly After the halt in June holdings started falling naturally as debt matured and were projected to fall to 1 7 trillion by 2012 The Fed s revised goal became to keep holdings at 2 054 trillion To maintain that level the Fed bought 30 billion in two to ten year Treasury notes every month 39 November 2010 QE2 In November 2010 the Fed announced a second round of quantitative easing buying 600 billion of Treasury securities by the end of the second quarter of 2011 40 41 The expression QE2 became a ubiquitous nickname in 2010 used to refer to this second round of quantitative easing by US central banks 42 Retrospectively the round of quantitative easing preceding QE2 was called QE1 43 44 September 2012 QE3 A third round of quantitative easing QE3 was announced on 13 September 2012 In an 11 1 vote the Federal Reserve decided to launch a new 40 billion per month open ended bond purchasing program of agency mortgage backed securities Additionally the Federal Open Market Committee FOMC announced that it would likely maintain the federal funds rate near zero at least through 2015 45 46 According to NASDAQ com this is effectively a stimulus program that allows the Federal Reserve to relieve 40 billion per month of commercial housing market debt risk 47 Because of its open ended nature QE3 has earned the popular nickname of QE Infinity 48 better source needed On 12 December 2012 the FOMC announced an increase in the amount of open ended purchases from 40 billion to 85 billion per month 49 On 19 June 2013 Ben Bernanke announced a tapering of some of the Fed s QE policies contingent upon continued positive economic data Specifically he said that the Fed could scale back its bond purchases from 85 billion to 65 billion a month during the upcoming September 2013 policy meeting 50 51 He also suggested that the bond buying program could wrap up by mid 2014 52 While Bernanke did not announce an interest rate hike he suggested that if inflation followed a 2 target rate and unemployment decreased to 6 5 the Fed would likely start raising rates The stock markets dropped by approximately 4 3 over the three trading days following Bernanke s announcement with the Dow Jones dropping 659 points between 19 and 24 June closing at 14 660 at the end of the day on 24 June 53 On 18 September 2013 the Fed decided to hold off on scaling back its bond buying program 54 and announced in December 2013 that it would begin to taper its purchases in January 2014 55 Purchases were halted on 29 October 2014 56 after accumulating 4 5 trillion in assets 57 March 2020 QE4 Further information Economic impact of the COVID 19 pandemic nbsp Increase in US Federal Reserve assets in response to COVID 19 pandemic 58 The Federal Reserve began conducting its fourth quantitative easing operation since the 2008 financial crisis on 15 March 2020 it announced approximately 700 billion in new quantitative easing via asset purchases to support US liquidity in response to the COVID 19 pandemic 59 As of mid summer 2020 this resulted in an additional 2 trillion in assets on the books of the Federal Reserve 60 United Kingdom edit nbsp Immediate and delayed effects of quantitative easing 61 The Bank of England s QE programme commenced in March 2009 when it purchased around 165 billion in assets as of September 2009 and around 175 billion in assets by the end of October 2009 62 Five further tranches of bond purchases between 2009 and November 2020 brought the peak QE total to 895 billion 63 The Bank imposed a number of constraints on the QE policy namely that it would not buy more than 70 of any issue of government debt and that it would only buy traditional non index linked debt with a maturity of more than three years 64 Originally the bonds eligible for purchase were limited to UK government debt but this was later relaxed to include high quality commercial bonds 65 QE was primarily designed as an instrument of monetary policy The mechanism required the Bank of England to purchase government bonds on the secondary market financed by the creation of new central bank money This would have the effect of increasing the asset prices of the bonds purchased thereby lowering yields and dampening longer term interest rates and making it cheaper for businesses to raise capital 66 The aim of the policy was initially to ease liquidity constraints in the sterling reserves system but evolved into a wider policy to provide economic stimulus Another side effect is that investors will switch to other investments such as shares boosting their price and thus encouraging consumption 67 In 2012 the Bank estimated that quantitative easing had benefited households differentially according to the assets they hold richer households have more assets 68 In February 2022 the Bank of England announced its intention to commence winding down the QE portfolio 69 Initially this would be achieved by not replacing tranches of maturing bonds and would later be accelerated through active bond sales In August 2022 the Bank of England reiterated its intention to accelerate the QE wind down through active bond sales This policy was affirmed in an exchange of letters between the Bank of England and the UK Chancellor of the Exchequer in September 2022 70 Between February 2022 and September 2022 a total of 37 1bn of government bonds matured reducing the outstanding stock from 875 0bn at the end of 2021 to 837 9bn In addition a total of 1 1bn of corporate bonds matured reducing the stock from 20 0bn to 18 9bn with sales of the remaining stock planned to begin on 27 September On 28 September 2022 the Bank of England issued a Market Notice announcing its intention to carry out purchases of long dated gilts in a temporary and targeted way 71 This was in response to market conditions in which the sterling exchange rate and bond asset pricing were significantly disrupted following a UK government fiscal statement 72 The Bank stated its announcement would apply to conventional gilts of residual maturity greater than 20 years in the secondary market The existing constraints applicable to QE bond purchases would continue to apply The funding of the purchases would be met from central bank reserves but would be segregated in a different portfolio from existing asset purchases The Bank also announced that its annual 80bn target to reduce the existing QE portfolio remained unchanged but in the light of current market conditions the beginning of gilt sale operations would be postponed to 31 October 2022 73 Eurozone edit Main article The ECB s response to the European Debt Crisis The European Central Bank engaged in large scale purchase of covered bonds in May 2009 74 and purchased around 250 billion worth of sovereign bonds from targeted member states in 2010 and 2011 the SMP Programme However until 2015 the ECB refused to openly admit they were doing quantitative easing citation needed In a dramatic change of policy following the new Jackson Hole Consensus on 22 January 2015 Mario Draghi President of the European Central Bank announced an expanded asset purchase programme where 60 billion per month of euro area bonds from central governments agencies and European institutions would be bought 75 Beginning in March 2015 the stimulus was planned to last until September 2016 at the earliest with a total QE of at least 1 1 trillion Mario Draghi announced the programme would continue until we see a continued adjustment in the path of inflation referring to the ECB s need to combat the growing threat of deflation across the eurozone in early 2015 76 77 In March 2016 the ECB increased its monthly bond purchases to 80 billion from 60 billion and started to include corporate bonds under the asset purchasing programme and announced new ultra cheap four year loans to banks From November 2019 the ECB resumed buying up eurozone government bonds at a rate of 20 billion in an effort to encourage governments to borrow more and spend in domestic investment projects 78 In March 2020 to help the economy absorb the shock of the COVID 19 crisis the ECB announced a 750 billion Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme PEPP 79 The aim of the stimulus package PEPP was to lower borrowing costs and increase lending in the euro area 80 Switzerland edit At the beginning of 2013 the Swiss National Bank had the largest balance sheet relative to the size of its economy It was responsible for at close to 100 of Switzerland s national output A total of 12 of its reserves were in foreign equities By contrast the US Federal Reserve s holdings equalled about 20 of US GDP while the European Central Bank s assets were worth 30 of GDP 81 The SNB s balance sheet has increased massively due to its QE programme to the extent that in December 2020 the US treasury accused Switzerland of being a currency manipulator The US administration recommended Switzerland to increase the retirement age for Swiss workers to reduce saving assets by the Swiss Social Security administration in order to boost domestic demand and reduce the necessity to maintain QE to stabilize the parity between the dollar and the Swiss franc 82 Sweden edit Sveriges Riksbank launched quantitative easing in February 2015 announcing government bond purchases of nearly US 1 2 billion 83 The annualised inflation rate in January 2015 was 0 3 and the bank implied that Sweden s economy could slide into deflation 83 Japan after 2007 and Abenomics edit See also Abenomics In early October 2010 the Bank of Japan BOJ announced that it would examine the purchase of 5 trillion US 60 billion in assets This was an attempt to push down the value of the yen against the US dollar to stimulate the domestic economy by making Japanese exports cheaper however it was ineffective 84 On 4 August 2011 the BOJ announced a unilateral move to increase the commercial bank current account balance from 40 trillion US 504 billion to a total of 50 trillion US 630 billion 85 86 In October 2011 the bank expanded its asset purchase program by 5 trillion 66bn to a total of 55 trillion 87 On 4 April 2013 the Bank of Japan announced that it would expand its asset purchase program by 60 trillion to 70 trillion per year 88 The bank hoped to banish deflation and achieve an inflation rate of 2 within two years This would be achieved through a QE programme worth US 1 4 trillion an amount so large it is expected to double the money supply 89 This policy has been named Abenomics a portmanteau of economic policies from Shinzō Abe the former Prime Minister of Japan On 31 October 2014 the BOJ announced the expansion of its bond buying program to purchase 80 trillion of bonds a year 90 In addition to purchases of bonds Governor Masaaki Shirakawa also directed the BOJ to begin purchasing corporate shares as well as debt securities in October 2010 The BOJ came up with a policy to purchase index ETFs as part of the 2010 Comprehensive Monetary Easing program which initially placed a cap of 450 billion shares with a termination in December 2011 However later Governor Haruhiko Kuroda replaced the program with the Quantitative and Qualitative Monetary Easing policy which empowered the BOJ to buy ETFs with no cap or termination date with an increased annual target of 1 trillion The cap was raised multiple times to over 19 trillion by March 2018 And in March 16 2020 following the Covid pandemic the BOJ doubled its annual ETF purchase target to 12 trillion 91 Effectiveness of QE editThe effectiveness of quantitative easing is the subject of an intense dispute among researchers as it is difficult to separate the effect of quantitative easing from other contemporaneous economic and policy measures such as negative rates Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan calculated that as of July 2012 there was very little impact on the economy 92 Bank deposits in the Fed increased by nearly 4 trillion during QE1 3 closely tracking Fed bond purchases A different assessment has been offered by Federal Reserve Governor Jeremy Stein who has said that measures of quantitative easing such as large scale asset purchases have played a significant role in supporting economic activity 93 While the literature on the topic has grown over time it has also been shown that central banks own research on the effectiveness of quantitative easing tends to be optimistic in comparison to research by independent researchers 94 which could indicate a conflict of interest or cognitive bias in central bank research Several studies published in the aftermath of the crisis found that quantitative easing in the US has effectively contributed to lower long term interest rates on a variety of securities as well as lower credit risk This boosted GDP growth and modestly increased inflation 95 96 97 98 99 100 A predictable but unintended consequence of the lower interest rates was to drive investment capital into equities thereby inflating the value of equities relative to the value of goods and services and increasing the wealth gap between the wealthy and working class In the Eurozone studies have shown that QE successfully averted deflationary spirals in 2013 2014 and prevented the widening of bond yield spreads between member states 101 QE also helped reduce bank lending cost 102 However the real effect of QE on GDP and inflation remained modest 103 104 and very heterogeneous depending on methodologies used in research studies which find on GDP comprised between 0 2 and 1 5 and between 0 1 and 1 4 on inflation Model based studies tend to find a higher impact than empirical ones citation needed In Japan focusing on equity purchases studies have shown that QE successfully boosted stock prices 105 91 but appear to have not been successful in stimulating corporate investment 91 Risks and side effects editQuantitative easing may cause higher inflation than desired if the amount of easing required is overestimated and too much money is created by the purchase of liquid assets 106 On the other hand QE can fail to spur demand if banks remain reluctant to lend money to businesses and households Even then QE can still ease the process of deleveraging as it lowers yields However there is a time lag between monetary growth and inflation inflationary pressures associated with money growth from QE could build before the central bank acts to counter them 107 Inflationary risks are mitigated if the system s economy outgrows the pace of the increase of the money supply from the easing citation needed If production in an economy increases because of the increased money supply the value of a unit of currency may also increase even though there is more currency available For example if a nation s economy were to spur a significant increase in output at a rate at least as high as the amount of debt monetized the inflationary pressures would be equalized This can only happen if member banks actually lend the excess money out instead of hoarding the extra cash citation needed During times of high economic output the central bank always has the option of restoring reserves to higher levels through raising interest rates or other means effectively reversing the easing steps taken Economists such as John Taylor 108 believe that quantitative easing creates unpredictability Since the increase in bank reserves may not immediately increase the money supply if held as excess reserves the increased reserves create the danger that inflation may eventually result when the reserves are loaned out 109 QE benefits debtors since the interest rate has fallen there is less money to be repaid However it directly harms creditors as they earn less money from lower interest rates Devaluation of a currency also directly harms importers and consumers as the cost of imported goods is inflated by the devaluation of the currency 110 Impact on savings and pensions edit In the European Union World Pensions Council WPC financial economists have also argued that artificially low government bond interest rates induced by QE will have an adverse impact on the underfunding condition of pension funds since without returns that outstrip inflation pension investors face the real value of their savings declining rather than ratcheting up over the next few years 111 112 In addition to this low or negative interest rates create disincentives for saving 113 In a way this is an intended effect since QE is intended to spur consumer spending Effects on climate change edit In Europe central banks operating corporate quantitative easing i e QE programmes that include corporate bonds such as the European Central Bank or the Swiss National Bank have been increasingly criticized by NGOs 114 for not taking into account the climate impact of the companies issuing the bonds 115 116 117 118 In effect Corporate QE programmes are perceived as indirect subsidy to polluting companies The European Parliament has also joined the criticism by adopting several resolutions on the matter and has repeatedly called on the ECB to reflect climate change considerations in its policies 119 120 Central banks have usually responded by arguing they had to follow the principle of market neutrality 121 and should therefore refrain from making discretionary choices when selecting bonds on the market The notion that central banks can be market neutral is contested as central banks always make choices that are not neutral for financial markets when implementing monetary policy 122 Furthermore research has demonstrated that in the case of the ECB s corporate bond purchase programme the principle of market neutrality is not a practical reality as the ECB s purchases are concentrated on economic sectors that are not representative of the wider economy and tend to be skewed towards carbon intensive firms 123 Following this criticism in 2020 several top level ECB policymaker such as Christine Lagarde 124 Isabel Schnabel Frank Elderson 125 and others have pointed out the contradiction in the market neutrality logic In particular Schnabel argued that In the presence of market failures market neutrality may not be the appropriate benchmark for a central bank when the market by itself is not achieving efficient outcomes 126 Since 2020 several central banks including the ECB Bank of England and the Swedish central banks have announced their intention to incorporate climate criteria in their QE programmes 127 The Network for Greening the Financial System has identified different possible measures to align central banks collateral frameworks and QE with climate objectives 128 Increased income and wealth inequality edit Critics frequently point to the redistributive effects of quantitative easing For instance British Prime Minister Theresa May openly criticized QE in July 2016 for its regressive effects Monetary policy in the form of super low interest rates and quantitative easing has helped those on the property ladder at the expense of those who can t afford to own their own home 129 Dhaval Joshi of BCA Research wrote that QE cash ends up overwhelmingly in profits thereby exacerbating already extreme income inequality and the consequent social tensions that arise from it 130 Anthony Randazzo of the Reason Foundation wrote that QE is fundamentally a regressive redistribution program that has been boosting wealth for those already engaged in the financial sector or those who already own homes but passing little along to the rest of the economy It is a primary driver of income inequality 130 Those criticisms are partly based on some evidence provided by central banks themselves In 2012 a Bank of England report 131 showed that its quantitative easing policies had benefited mainly the wealthy and that 40 of those gains went to the richest 5 of British households 130 132 In May 2013 Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas President Richard Fisher said that cheap money has made rich people richer but has not done quite as much for working Americans 133 Answering similar criticisms expressed by MEP Molly Scott Cato the President of the ECB Mario Draghi once declared 134 Some of these policies may on the one hand increase inequality but on the other hand if we ask ourselves what the major source of inequality is the answer would be unemployment So to the extent that these policies help and they are helping on that front then certainly an accommodative monetary policy is better in the present situation than a restrictive monetary policy In July 2018 the ECB published a study 135 showing that its QE programme increased the net wealth of the poorest fifth of the population by 2 5 percent compared with just 1 0 percent for the richest fifth The study s credibility was however contested 136 137 International spillovers for BRICs and emerging economies edit Quantitative easing QE policies can have a profound effect on Forex rates since it changes the supply of one currency compared to another For instance if both the US and Europe are using quantitative easing to the same degree then the currency pair of US EUR may not fluctuate However if the US treasury uses QE to a higher degree as evidenced in the increased purchase of securities during an economic crisis but India does not then the value of the USD will decrease relative to the Indian rupee As a result quantitative easing has the same effect as purchasing foreign currencies effectively manipulating the value of one currency compared to another 138 139 BRIC countries have criticized the QE carried out by the central banks of developed nations They share the argument that such actions amount to protectionism and competitive devaluation As net exporters whose currencies are partially pegged to the dollar they protest that QE causes inflation to rise in their countries and penalizes their industries 140 141 142 143 In a joint statement leaders of Russia Brazil India China and South Africa collectively BRICS have condemned the policies of western economies saying It is critical for advanced economies to adopt responsible macro economic and financial policies avoid creating excessive liquidity and undertake structural reforms to lift growth as written in the Telegraph 144 According to Bloomberg reporter David Lynch the new money from quantitative easing could be used by the banks to invest in emerging markets commodity based economies commodities themselves and non local opportunities rather than to lend to local businesses that are having difficulty getting loans 145 Moral hazard edit Another criticism prevalent in Europe 146 is that QE creates moral hazard for governments Central banks purchases of government securities artificially depress the cost of borrowing Normally governments issuing additional debt see their borrowing costs rise which discourages them from overdoing it In particular market discipline in the form of higher interest rates will cause a government like Italy s tempted to increase deficit spending to think twice Not so however when the central bank acts as bond buyer of last resort and is prepared to purchase government securities without limit In such circumstances market discipline will be incapacitated Reputational risks edit Richard W Fisher president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas warned in 2010 that QE carries the risk of being perceived as embarking on the slippery slope of debt monetization We know that once a central bank is perceived as targeting government debt yields 113 at a time of persistent budget deficits concern about debt monetization quickly arises Later in the same speech he stated that the Fed is monetizing the government debt The math of this new exercise is readily transparent The Federal Reserve will buy 110 billion a month in Treasuries an amount that annualized represents the projected deficit of the federal government for next year For the next eight months the nation s central bank will be monetizing the federal debt 147 Ben Bernanke remarked in 2002 that the US government had a technology called the printing press or today its electronic equivalent so that if rates reached zero and deflation threatened the government could always act to ensure deflation was prevented He said however that the government would not print money and distribute it willy nilly but would rather focus its efforts in certain areas e g buying federal agency debt securities and mortgage backed securities 148 149 According to economist Robert McTeer former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas there is nothing wrong with printing money during a recession and quantitative easing is different from traditional monetary policy only in its magnitude and pre announcement of amount and timing 4 5 Effects on stock market prices edit The effects of quantitative easing on the stock market are always present The stock market reacts to nearly all updates regarding the Federal Reserve s actions It tends to experience an upswing following announcements of expansionary policies and a downturn following announcements of contractionary policies 150 Although there is no certain outcome available evidence points to a positive correlation between quantitative easing policies and upward trends in the stock market 151 Some of the most significant increases in the U S stock market indices have coincided with the implementation of quantitative easing measures The most recent example would be the Federal Reserve s policies during the COVID 19 pandemic The urgent need to stimulate the economy required a large influx of new liquidity which has been achieved by quantitative easing This liquidity was lent by banks to enterprises stimulating their expansion and inflating sales which led investors to anticipate growth in company revenues leading to increased stock purchases 152 Conversely the post COVID 19 economy which faced increased inflation due to excessive quantitative easing has been addressed through quantitative tightening measures During this period stocks experienced a downward shift Investors thus favor the idea of increasing asset values during initial inflationary periods However it s more probable that confidence grows due to the anticipation of a healthier economy following expansionary measures and decreases when opposite measures are put in place 153 Alternative policies editQE for the people edit See also Helicopter money In response to concerns that QE is failing to create sufficient demand particularly in the Eurozone some have called for QE for the people or helicopter money Instead of buying government bonds or other securities by creating bank reserves as the Federal Reserve and Bank of England have done some suggest that central banks could make payments directly to households in a similar fashion as Milton Friedman s helicopter money 154 Economists Mark Blyth and Eric Lonergan argue in Foreign Affairs that this is the most effective solution for the Eurozone particularly given the restrictions on fiscal policy 155 They argue that based on the evidence from tax rebates in the United States less than 5 of GDP transferred by the ECB to the household sector in the Eurozone would suffice to generate a recovery a fraction of what it intends to be done under standard QE Oxford economist John Muellbauer has suggested that this could be legally implemented using the electoral register 156 On 27 March 2015 19 economists including Steve Keen Ann Pettifor Robert Skidelsky and Guy Standing have signed a letter to the Financial Times calling on the European Central Bank to adopt a more direct approach to its quantitative easing plan announced earlier in February 157 In August 2019 prominent central bankers Stanley Fischer and Philip Hildebrand co authored a paper published by BlackRock in which they propose a form of helicopter money 158 Carbon quantitative easing edit Carbon quantitative easing CQE is an untested form of QE that is featured in a newly proposed international climate policy called a global carbon reward 159 160 161 A major goal of CQE is to finance the global carbon reward by managing the exchange rate of a new representative currency called a carbon currency The carbon currency will act as an international unit of account and a store of value because it will represent the mass of carbon that is mitigated and rewarded under the global carbon reward policy Fiscal policy edit Keynesian economics became popular after the Great Depression The idea is that in an economy with low inflation and high unemployment especially technological unemployment demand side economics will stimulate consumer spending which increases business profits which increases investment Keynesians promote methods like public works infrastructure redevelopment and increases in the social safety net to increase demand and inflation Monetary financing edit Main article Monetary financing Quantitative easing has been nicknamed money printing by some members of the media 162 163 164 central bankers 165 and financial analysts 166 167 However QE is a very different form of money creation than it is commonly understood when talking about money printing otherwise called monetary financing or debt monetization Indeed with QE the newly created money is usually used to buy financial assets beyond just government bonds 162 corporate bonds etc and QE is usually implemented in the secondary market In most developed nations e g the United Kingdom the United States Japan and the Eurozone central banks are prohibited from buying government debt directly from the government and must instead buy it from the secondary market 168 169 This two step process where the government sells bonds to private entities that in turn sell them to the central bank has been called monetizing the debt by many analysts 168 The distinguishing characteristic between QE and debt monetization is that with the former the central bank creates money to stimulate the economy not to finance government spending although an indirect effect of QE is to lower rates on sovereign bonds Also the central bank has the stated intention of reversing the QE when the economy has recovered by selling the government bonds and other financial assets back into the market 162 The only effective way to determine whether a central bank has monetized debt is to compare its performance relative to its stated objectives Many central banks have adopted an inflation target It is likely that a central bank is monetizing the debt if it continues to buy government debt when inflation is above target and if the government has problems with debt financing 168 Some economists such as Adair Turner have argued that outright monetary financing would be more effective than QE 170 171 Neo Fisherism edit Neo Fisherism based on theories made by Irving Fisher reasons that the solution to low inflation is not quantitative easing but paradoxically to increase interest rates This is due to the fact that if interest rates continue to decline banks will lose customers and less money will be invested back into the economy In a situation of low inflation and high debt customers will feel more secure holding on to cash or converting cash into commodities which fails to stimulate economic growth If the money supply increases from quantitative easing customers will subsequently default in the face of higher prices thus resetting the low inflation and worsening the low inflation issue 172 173 See also editQuantitative tightening Yield Curve ControlReferences edit Quantitative Easing Bank of England Michael Joyce David Miles Andrew Scott amp Dimitri Vayanos Quantitative Easing and Unconventional Monetary Policy An Introduction The Economic Journal Vol 122 No 564 November 2012 pp F271 F288 The most high profile form of unconventional monetary policy has been Quantitative Easing QE a b Oatley Thomas 2019 International Political Economy Sixth Edition Routledge pp 369 370 ISBN 978 1 351 03464 7 a b McTeer Bob 23 December 2010 There s nothing wrong with the Fed printing money Forbes a b McTeer Bob 26 August 2010 Quantitative easing is a toxic phrase for a routine policy Forbes Joseph E Gagnon Quantitative Easing An Underappreciated Success Peterson Institute for International Economics Policy Brief 16 4 April 2016 Ricardo Reis Funding Quantitative Easing to Target Inflation in Designing Resilient Monetary Policy Frameworks for the Future Proceedings of the Jackson Hole Economic Policy Symposium Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City August 2016 pp 423 478 A numbers game How quantitative easing lifts stock prices Banking Observer McKenna Barrie 27 April 2014 An uneasy relationship behind response to financial crash The Globe and Mail Quantitative easing A therapy of last resort The New York Times 1 January 2009 Retrieved 12 July 2010 Stewart Heather 29 January 2009 Quantitative easing last resort to get credit moving again The Guardian London Retrieved 12 July 2010 Bullard James January 2010 Quantitative Easing Uncharted Waters for Monetary Policy Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis Retrieved 26 July 2011 Q amp A Quantitative easing BBC 9 March 2009 Retrieved 29 March 2009 Lerven Frank van 2016 Quantitative Easing in the Eurozone a One Year Assessment Intereconomics 2016 4 237 242 doi 10 1007 s10272 016 0608 9 hdl 10419 191169 S2CID 189843544 Quantitative easing portfolio rebalancing and credit growth micro evidence from Germany PDF Luca Dedola Georgios Georgiadis Johannes Grab Arnaud Mehl 21 October 2020 Quantitative easing policies and exchange rates voxeu org Retrieved 18 December 2020 Dunn Will 1 March 2024 The QE theory of everything New Statesman Retrieved 3 March 2024 Bank of England chief attacks peers for calling quantitative easing an addiction The Telegraph 5 August 2021 Retrieved 17 August 2021 The Financial Crisis Then and Now Ancient Rome and 2008 CE Harvard University 10 December 2018 Retrieved 31 May 2022 Hoover Institution Economics Working Paper 14110 Exiting from Low Interest Rates to Normality An Historical Perspective November 2014 Retrieved 10 March 2015 Pinto Edward J 27 April 2016 The 30 year fixed mortgage should disappear American Enterprise Institute Stefan Homburg 2017 A Study in Monetary Macroeconomics Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 880753 7 Telegraph Federal Reserve ends QE 29 October 2014 Retrieved 10 March 2015 Is QE2 finally the economic collapse Fortune magazine 11 August 2010 The Heritage Foundation Is the Inflation Threat Real Is it Imminent Retrieved 10 March 2015 Archived 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine 量的緩和 kotobank jp Japan sets inflation goal in fight against deflation BBC News 16 February 2010 Retrieved 4 April 2011 Mark Spiegel FRBSF Economic Letter Quantitative Easing by the Bank of Japan 11 02 2001 Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Archived from the original on 14 May 2013 Retrieved 19 January 2009 Hiroshi Fujiki et al Monetary Policy under Zero Interest Rate Viewpoints of Central Bank Economists Archived 21 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine Monetary and Economic Studies February 2001 p 98 Retrieved 9 August 2010 Shirakawa Masaaki One Year Under Quantitative Easing Archived 21 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine Institute for Monetary and Economic Studies Bank of Japan 2002 Bank of Japan New Procedures for Money Market Operations and Monetary Easing Archived 19 July 2009 at the Wayback Machine 19 March 2001 Retrieved 9 August 2010 Easing Out of the Bank of Japan s Monetary Easing Policy 2004 33 19 November 2004 Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco PIMCO Tomoya Masanao interview Archived from the original on 26 July 2010 Hiroshi Ugai July 2006 Effects of the Quantitative Easing Policy A Survey of Empirical Analyses Bank of Japan Working Paper Alloway Tracy The Unthinkable Has Happened ft com 10 November 2008 Retrieved 9 August 2010 Bernanke san Signals Policy Shift Evoking Japan Comparison Bloomberg com 2 December 2008 Bank pumps 75bn into economy ft com 5 March 2009 Federal Reserve announces it will initiate a program to purchase the direct obligations of housing related government sponsored enterprises and mortgage backed securities backed by Fannie Mae Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Ali Abdulmalik Quantitative Monetary Easing The history and impacts on financial markets academia edu Retrieved 14 February 2015 Censky Annalyn 3 November 2010 QE2 Fed pulls the trigger CNNmoney com Retrieved 10 August 2011 What is the Federal Reserve Quantitative Easing Archived 11 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine useconomy about com 22 September 2011 Authers John 5 November 2010 Fed s desperate measure is a watershed moment Financial Times Conerly Bill 13 September 2012 QE3 and the Economy It Will Help But Not Solve All Problems Forbes Retrieved 13 September 2012 Inman Phillip 14 July 2011 Moody s sounds note of caution while Bernanke promises support for U S economy The Guardian London Retrieved 19 July 2011 Zumbrun Joshua 13 September 2012 Fed Undertakes QE3 With 40 Billion MBS Purchases Per Month Bloomberg News Retrieved 13 September 2012 Federal Reserve issues FOMC statement Federal Reserve Board 12 January 2012 Retrieved 1 January 2013 Jensen Greg 19 September 2012 QE3 Launched The Ever Decreasing Effects of Monetary Stimulus NASDAQ Archived from the original on 20 September 2012 Retrieved 19 September 2012 Jason Haver 14 September 2012 QE Infinity Poking Holes in Bernanke s Logic Accessed 18 August 2018 Federal Reserve issues FOMC statement Press release Federal Reserve 12 December 2012 Retrieved 18 August 2018 Dunstan Prial Bernanke Offers Possible Timetable for Tapering Fox Business Archived from the original on 22 June 2013 Retrieved 24 June 2013 Slatyer Will 2015 The Life Death Rhythms of Capitalist Regimes Debt Before Dishonour Timetable of World Dominance 1400 2100 Partridge Publishing Singapore ISBN 9781482829617 Fed Seen by Economists Tapering QE at September Meeting Bloomberg Dow Jones down 4 3 percent since Fed chair Ben Bernanke took the podium AL com 25 June 2013 Analysis Time to taper Not if you look at bank loans Reuters 19 September 2013 JeeYeon Park 18 December 2013 Fed to reduce bond purchases by 10 billion a month Cnbc com Retrieved 13 September 2018 Appelbaum Binyamin 29 October 2014 Federal Reserve Caps Its Bond Purchases Focus Turns to Interest Rates The New York Times Wolfers Justin 29 October 2014 The Fed Has Not Stopped Trying to Stimulate the Economy The New York Times Federal Reserve Board Recent balance sheet trends Federal Reserve cuts rates to zero and launches massive 700 billion quantitative easing program CNBC 15 March 2020 Federal Reserve Board Recent balance sheet trends Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System The United Kingdom s quantitative easing policy design operation and impact PDF Retrieved 30 June 2023 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 31 December 2010 Retrieved 27 December 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Quantitative easing www bankofengland co uk A flat economy cont d BBC News 12 January 2012 Bank of England Monetary Policy Quantitative Easing Explained Amount of Assets Purchased www bankofengland co uk Archived from the original on 2 January 2011 Bean Charles July 2009 Ask the Deputy Governor Bank of England Archived from the original on 26 July 2010 Retrieved 12 July 2010 Quantitative Easing explained PDF Bank of England pp 7 9 ISBN 1 85730 114 5 Archived from the original PDF on 30 October 2010 Retrieved 20 July 2010 page 7 Bank buys assets from institutions credits the seller s bank account So the seller has more money in their bank account while their bank holds a corresponding claim against the Bank of England known as reserves page 8 high quality debt page 9 such as shares or company bonds That will push up the prices of those assets The Distributional Effects of Asset Purchases Bank of England 12 July 2012 Retrieved 4 January 2020 Exchange of letters between the Governor and the Chancellor on the Asset Purchase Facility February 2022 8 June 2023 Exchange of letters between the Governor and the Chancellor on the Asset Purchase Facility September 2022 8 June 2023 Gilt Market Operations Market Notice 28 September 2022 6 June 2023 Pound hits record low after tax cut plans BBC News 26 September 2022 Bank of England announces gilt market operation 8 June 2023 Duncan Gary 8 May 2009 European Central Bank opts for quantitative easing to lift the eurozone The Times London Jolly David Ewing Jack 22 January 2015 E C B Stimulus Calls for 60 Billion Euros in Monthly Bond Buying The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 11 May 2022 ECB ECB announces expanded asset purchase programme europa eu 22 January 2015 ECB unveils massive QE boost for eurozone BBC News 22 January 2015 Monetary policy decisions European Central Bank 12 September 2019 Retrieved 11 May 2022 Bank European Central 18 March 2020 ECB announces 750 billion Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme PEPP a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Our response to coronavirus COVID 19 European Central Bank 19 February 2021 Blackstone Brian Wessel David 8 January 2013 Button Down Central Bank Bets It All The Wall Street Journal Meier Markus Diem 16 December 2020 Die USA verlangen von der Schweiz Erhohung des Rentenalters in German Tages Anzeiger Retrieved 17 December 2020 a b Sweden cuts rates below zero and starts QE BBC News Business 12 February 2015 Quantitative Easing A lesson learned from Japan Oye Times Japan government and central bank intervene to cut yen BBC News 4 August 2011 Bank of Japan increases QE by 10 trillion yen Archived 6 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Banking Times 4 August 2011 Bank of Japan increases stimulus and keeps rates low BBC News 27 October 2011 Price Stability Target of 2 Percent and Quantitative and Qualitative Monetary Easing with Yield Curve Control Bank of Japan Retrieved 18 August 2018 Stewart Heather 4 April 2013 Japan aims to jump start economy with 1 4tn of quantitative easing The Guardian London Expansion of the Quantitative and Qualitative Monetary Easing PDF Bank of Japan 31 October 2014 Retrieved 18 August 2018 a b c Charoenwong Ben Morck Randall Wiwattanakantang Yupana 14 May 2021 Bank of Japan Equity Purchases The Non Effects of Extreme Quantitative Easing Review of Finance 25 3 713 743 doi 10 1093 rof rfaa029 ISSN 1572 3097 Navarro Bruno J 12 July 2012 CNBC Coverage of Greenspan Finance yahoo com Archived 18 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine Speech by Governor Stein on evaluating large scale asset purchases Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 11 October 2012 Kempf Elisabeth Pastor Lubos 5 October 2020 Fifty shades of QE Central bankers versus academics VoxEU org Retrieved 30 March 2021 Gilchrist Simon and Egon Zakrajsek The Impact of the Federal Reserve s Large Scale Asset Purchase Programs on Corporate Credit Risk Journal of Money Credit and Banking 45 s2 2013 29 57 Gagnon Joseph et al Large scale asset purchases by the Federal Reserve did they work 2010 Curdia Vasco and Andrea Ferrero How stimulatory are large scale asset purchases FRBSF Economic Letter 22 2013 1 5 Chen Han Vasco Curdia and Andrea Ferrero The macroeconomic effects of large scale asset purchase programmes The economic journal 122 564 2012 Gagnon Joseph et al The financial market effects of the Federal Reserve s large scale asset purchases International Journal of Central Banking 7 1 2011 3 43 Irwin Neil 31 October 2014 Quantitative Easing is Ending Here s What It Did in Charts The New York Times Marcello Siklos Pierre L Blot Christophe Creel Jerome Hubert Paul Bonatti Luigi Fracasso Andrea Tamborini Roberto Beckmann Joscha Fiedler Salomon Gern Klaus Jurgen Kooths Stefan Quast Josefine Wolters Maik Capolongo Angela Gros Daniel Benigno Pierpaolo Canofari Paolo Di Bartolomeo Giovanni Messori 2020 The ECB s asset purchase programmes experience and future perspectives compilation of papers ISBN 978 92 846 7120 5 OCLC 1222784406 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Blattner Laura Nogueira Gil 2016 The Effect of Quantitative Easing on Lending Conditions SSRN Electronic Journal doi 10 2139 ssrn 2749128 ISSN 1556 5068 The ECB s asset purchase programmes effectiveness risks alternatives monetary dialogue papers September 2020 Joscha Beckmann Salomon Fiedler Klaus Jurgen Gern Stefan Kooths Josefine Quast Maik Wolters Brussels 2020 ISBN 978 92 846 7095 6 OCLC 1222783951 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Gambetti Luca Musso Alberto June 2017 The macroeconomic impact of the ECB s expanded asset purchase programme APP Working Paper Series Barbon Andrea Gianinazzi Virginia 1 December 2019 Quantitative Easing and Equity Prices Evidence from the ETF Program of the Bank of Japan The Review of Asset Pricing Studies 9 2 210 255 doi 10 1093 rapstu raz008 ISSN 2045 9920 Bowlby Chris 5 March 2009 The fear of printing too much money BBC News Retrieved 25 June 2011 Thornton Daniel L 2010 The downside of quantitative easing PDF Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis Economic Synopses 34 John B Taylor The Fed s New View is a Little Less Scary 20 June 2013 blog post 1 John Taylor Stanford 2012 testimony before House Financial Service Committee page two 2 retrieved 20 October 2013 Inman Phillip 29 June 2011 How the world paid the hidden cost of America s quantitative easing The Guardian London M Nicolas J Firzli quoted in Sinead Cruise 4 August 2012 Zero Return World Squeezes Retirement Plans Reuters with CNBC Retrieved 5 August 2012 M Nicolas J Firzli 1 March 2013 Europe s Pension Predicament the Broken Bismarckian Promise Plan Sponsor Archived from the original on 6 May 2013 Retrieved 1 March 2013 a b Henderson Isaiah M 4 May 2019 On the Causes of European Political Instability The California Review Retrieved 19 July 2019 ECB cash injections for polluters must stop 70 NGOs demand corporateeurope org Corporate Europe Observatory Retrieved 28 November 2020 ECB s purchasing policies skewed towards carbon intensive industries report Greenpeace European Unit Retrieved 28 November 2020 admin The ECB s dirty quantitative easing Reclaim Finance Retrieved 28 November 2020 Dafermos Yannis Gabor Daniela Nikolaidi Maria Pawloff Adam Lerven Frank van Decarbonising is easy New Economics Foundation Retrieved 28 November 2020 Jourdan Kalinowski 4 April 2019 REPORT Aligning monetary policy with the EU s climate targets Positive Money Europe Retrieved 28 November 2020 ECB policy is working but new challenges need new responses News European Parliament www europarl europa eu 2 December 2020 Retrieved 28 November 2020 Vasto Alessia Del 11 February 2021 EU Parliament pressures ECB to address climate change Positive Money Europe Retrieved 30 March 2021 Climate change and central banks www bundesbank de Retrieved 28 November 2020 Colesanti Senni Chiara Monnin Pierre 16 October 2020 Central Bank Market Neutrality is a Myth Council on Economic Policies Retrieved 30 March 2021 Papoutsi M Piazzesi M and Schneider M 2021 How unconventional is green monetary policy Working Paper ECB will consider dropping market neutrality Lagarde Central Banking 15 October 2020 Retrieved 28 November 2020 ECB market neutrality crumbling OMFIF 16 February 2021 Retrieved 30 March 2021 Schnabel Isabel 28 September 2020 When markets fail the need for collective action in tackling climate change a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Reporter Financial Bank of England considering attaching climate conditions to asset purchases Financial Reporter Retrieved 28 November 2020 Adapting central bank operations to a hotter world Reviewing some options Banque de France 24 March 2021 Retrieved 30 March 2021 This is what Theresa May said about the kind of Prime Minister she ll be and what she really meant The Independent 11 July 2016 Retrieved 13 September 2018 a b c Frank Robert 14 September 2012 Does Quantitative Easing Mainly Help the Rich CNBC Retrieved 21 May 2013 Quarterly Bulletins PDF Bank of England 15 August 2018 Archived from the original PDF on 22 July 2017 Retrieved 13 September 2018 Elliott Larry 23 August 2012 Britain s richest 5 gained most from quantitative easing Bank of England The Guardian London Retrieved 21 May 2013 Belvedere Matthew J QE Halt Would Be Too Violent for Market Fed s Fisher CNBC Retrieved 20 May 2013 Transcript of Monetary Dialogue 15 June 2015 PDF Retrieved 22 July 2016 Monetary policy and household inequality PDF ECB July 2018 Economists find ECB stimulus shrank eurozone inequality France 24 18 July 2018 Retrieved 27 September 2018 Jourdan Stanislas Fontan 10 May 2017 How The ECB Boosts Inequality And What It Can Do About It Social Europe Retrieved 30 March 2021 Quantitative Easing and the Forex Market Management Study Guide Retrieved 18 December 2020 Rodrigo Fernandez amp Pablo Bortz amp Nicolas Zeolla A critical assesment sic of the harmful impact of European monetary policy on developing countries SOMO June 2018 Jeff Black and Zoe Schneeweis China s Yi Warns on Currency Wars as Yuan in Equilibrium Bloomberg News 26 January 2013 John Paul Rathbone and Jonathan Wheatley Brazil s finance chief attacks US over QE3 Financial Times 20 September 2012 Richard Blackden Brazil president Dilma Rousseff blasts Western QE as monetary tsunami The Daily Telegraph London 10 April 2012 Michael Steen and Alice Ross Warning on new currency war Financial Times 22 January 2013 Blackden Richard 29 March 2012 BRICs attack QE and urge Western leaders to be responsible Daily Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 7 October 2019 Lynch David J 17 November 2010 Bernanke s Cheap Money Stimulus Spurs Corporate Investment Outside U S Bloomberg Eichengreen Barry 11 June 2019 Critics of quantitative easing should consider the alternative Barry Eichengreen The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 7 October 2019 Speeches by Richard W Fisher Dallas Fed 8 November 2010 Wolf Martin 16 December 2008 Helicopter Ben confronts the challenge of a lifetime Financial Times Speech Bernanke Deflation 21 November 2002 Federal Reserve Bank Mishra Ajay Kumar Parikh Bhavik Spahr Ronald W November 2020 Stock market liquidity funding liquidity financial crises and quantitative easing International Review of Economics amp Finance 70 456 478 doi 10 1016 j iref 2020 08 013 ISSN 1059 0560 Hudepohl Tom van Lamoen Ryan de Vette Nander November 2021 Quantitative easing and exuberance in stock markets Evidence from the euro area Journal of International Money and Finance 118 102471 doi 10 1016 j jimonfin 2021 102471 ISSN 0261 5606 Fatouh Mahmoud Giansante Simone Ongena Steven December 2021 Economic support during the COVID crisis Quantitative easing and lending support schemes in the UK Economics Letters 209 110138 doi 10 1016 j econlet 2021 110138 ISSN 0165 1765 Dobbs R Koller T amp Lund S 2014 Winter What effect has quantitative easing had on your share price McKinsey amp Company https www mckinsey com client service corporate finance latest thinking mckinsey on finance media 5966C71286604E2DA0A2630B224E7F79 ashx How about quantitative easing for the people Reuters 1 August 2012 Archived from the original on 3 August 2012 Print Less but Transfer More Foreign Affairs September October 2014 Combatting Eurozone deflation VOX 23 December 2014 Better ways to boost eurozone economy and employment Financial Times 26 March 2015 Stanley Fischer Elga Bartsch Jean Boivin Stanley Fischer Philipp Hildebrand August 2019 Dealing with the next downturn From unconventional monetary policy to unprecedented policy coordination PDF BlackRock Institute Chen Delton B van der Beek Joel Cloud Jonathan 3 July 2017 Climate mitigation policy as a system solution addressing the risk cost of carbon Journal of Sustainable Finance amp Investment 7 3 233 274 doi 10 1080 20430795 2017 1314814 ISSN 2043 0795 S2CID 157277979 Chen Delton B van der Beek Joel Cloud Jonathan 2019 Doukas Haris Flamos Alexandros Lieu Jenny eds Hypothesis for a Risk Cost of Carbon Revising the Externalities and Ethics of Climate Change Understanding Risks and Uncertainties in Energy and Climate Policy Cham Springer International Publishing pp 183 222 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 03152 7 8 ISBN 978 3 030 03151 0 S2CID 158251793 Zappala Guglielmo 2018 Central Banks Role in Responding to Climate Change Monetary Policy and Macroprudential Regulation doi 10 13140 RG 2 2 33035 80167 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c Stephanomics Is quantitative easing really just printing money BBC Mackintosh James 2 December 2010 QE Replacement not debasement FT com Hyde Deborah 8 November 2010 Ask Citywire Quantitative easing part II Citywire Money Citywire co uk Bullard James 30 June 2009 Exit Strategies for the Federal Reserve PDF Speech Global Interdependence Center Philadelphia Pennsylvania United States Retrieved 26 June 2011 Bank of England to create new money a Q amp A The Daily Telegraph London 5 March 2009 Archived from the original on 13 September 2012 Duncan Gary 5 March 2009 Bank should start printing money says Times MPC The Times London a b c http research stlouisfed org publications es 10 ES1014 pdf Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis Stephanomics BBC Reichlin Lucrezia Turner Adair Woodford Michael 23 September 2019 Helicopter money as a policy option VoxEU org Retrieved 30 March 2021 Adair Turner 2015 The Case for Monetary Finance An Essentially Political Issue Conference paper IMF Retrieved 30 June 2023 Neo Fisherism A Radical Idea or the Most Obvious Solution to the Low Inflation Problem 20 July 2016 https www stlouisfed org publications regional economist july 2016 neo fisherism a radical idea or the most obvious solution to the low inflation problem Federal Reserve Bank of St LouisExternal links edit nbsp Look up quantitative easing in Wiktionary the free dictionary Credit Easing Policy Tools Interactive chart of the assets on Federal Reserve s balance sheet Deflation Making Sure It Doesn t Happen Here 2002 speech by Ben Bernanke on deflation and the utility of quantitative easing Bank of England Quantitative Easing Bank of England QE Explained Pamphlet Money creation in the modern economy Bank of England Document Explaining How Money Is Created and Destroyed Quantitative easing explained Financial Times Europe A Fed Governor Discusses Quantitative Easing Among Other Topics Portal nbsp Business and economics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quantitative easing amp oldid 1221734143 United States, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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