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Preference reversal and quantitative easing
Review of Financial EconomicsAbstract This study examines how U.S. quantitative easing (QE) has influenced risk‐taking in foreign exchange markets, focusing on the unintended spillover effects of the U.S. central bank's efforts to prop up market risk‐taking in major and emerging market currencies outside the U.S. economy.
Apostolos Xanthopoulos, Oguzhan Batmaz
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Quantitative Easing vs Credit Easing
2010On 18 March 2009 the Federal Reserve (Fed), the central bank of the United States, announced that it would pump an additional 1.15 trillion dollars into the financial markets. The Fed announced that “in the light of increasing economic slack, the Committee1 expects that inflation will remain subdued and sees some risk that inflation could persist for a
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SSRN Electronic Journal, 2017
I study optimal monetary policy in a simple New Keynesian model with portfolio adjustment costs. Purchases of long-term debt by the central bank (quantitative easing; ‘QE’) alter the average portfolio return and hence influence aggregate demand and inflation.
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I study optimal monetary policy in a simple New Keynesian model with portfolio adjustment costs. Purchases of long-term debt by the central bank (quantitative easing; ‘QE’) alter the average portfolio return and hence influence aggregate demand and inflation.
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Quantitative Easing: A Postmortem
International Journal of Political Economy, 2018The unconventional monetary policy of the Federal Reserve (Fed) during the global financial crisis of 2007-2009 and its aftermath is often credited with averting another Great Depression. The Fed’s interventions unfolded over two periods which can be distinguished with regards to the particular tools employed and goals pursued.
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World Economics Journal, 2009
Central banks around the world have moved to cut interest rates to record lows, with many in advanced economies going further and embracing full quantitative easing – creating new money to inject into the economy. This paper examines why quantitative easing has been necessary, and whether it is likely to result in higher demand or instead show up in ...
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Central banks around the world have moved to cut interest rates to record lows, with many in advanced economies going further and embracing full quantitative easing – creating new money to inject into the economy. This paper examines why quantitative easing has been necessary, and whether it is likely to result in higher demand or instead show up in ...
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Quantitative Easing in the 1930s
Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, 2018AbstractDuring the 1934–39 recovery from the U.S. Great Depression, overnight interest rates were usually at a lower bound. Meanwhile, American monetary authorities followed policies related to today's debates on quantitative easing: they tried to stabilize yields on Treasury bonds with open market operations; they created rapid growth in high‐powered ...
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Understanding Quantitative Easing
SSRN Electronic Journal, 2014Many misunderstandings are still circulating about the actual operational aspects and impacts of Quantitative Easing, also known as Permanent Open Market Operations or Large Scale Asset Purchases. This brief primer will provide a series of basic understandings that give the reader better insights as to the actual impacts of the program and how it works
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Inspecting the mechanism of quantitative easing in the euro area
Journal of Financial Economics, 2021Ralph S J Koijen +2 more
exaly
Effects of US quantitative easing on emerging market economies
Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, 2021Saroj Bhattarai +2 more
exaly

