在线国产一区二区_成人黄色片在线观看_国产成人免费_日韩精品免费在线视频_亚洲精品美女久久_欧美一级免费在线观看

US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
Business / View

Central banks lemmings of quantitative easing

By STEPHEN ROACH (China Daily) Updated: 2015-01-29 13:23

Central banks lemmings of quantitative easing

CAI MENG/CHINA DAILY

Predictably, the European Central Bank has joined the world's other major monetary authorities in the greatest experiment in the history of central banking. By now, the pattern is all too familiar. First, central banks take the conventional policy rate down to the dreaded "zero bound". Facing continued economic weakness, but having run out of conventional tools, they then embrace the unconventional approach of quantitative easing (QE).

The theory behind this strategy is simple: Unable to cut the price of credit further, central banks shift their focus to expanding its quantity. The implicit argument is that this move from price to quantity adjustments is the functional equivalent of additional monetary policy easing. Thus, even at the zero bound of nominal interest rates, it is argued, central banks still have weapons in their arsenal.

But are those weapons up to the task? For the ECB and the Bank of Japan, both of which are facing formidable downside risks to their economies and aggregate price levels, this is hardly an idle question. For the United States, where the ultimate consequences of QE remain to be seen, the answer is just as consequential.

In terms of transmission, the US Federal Reserve has focused on the so-called wealth effect. First, the balance sheet expansion of some $3.6 trillion since late 2008-which far exceeded the $2.5 trillion in nominal GDP growth over the QE period-boosted asset markets. It was assumed that the improvement in investors' portfolio performance-reflected in a more than threefold rise in the S&P 500 from its crisis-induced low in March 2009-would spur a burst of spending by increasingly wealthy consumers. The BOJ has used a similar justification for its own policy of quantitative and qualitative easing (QQE).

The ECB, however, will have a harder time making the case for wealth effects, largely because equity ownership by individuals (either direct or through their pension accounts) is far lower in Europe than in the US or Japan. For Europe, monetary policy seems more likely to be transmitted through banks, as well as through the currency channel, as a weaker euro-it has fallen some 15 percent against the US dollar over the last year-boosts exports.

The real sticking point for QE relates to traction. The US, where consumption accounts for the bulk of the shortfall in the post-crisis recovery, is a case in point. In an environment of excess debt and inadequate savings, wealth effects have done very little to ameliorate the balance sheet recession that clobbered US households when the property and credit bubbles burst. Indeed, annualized real consumption growth has averaged just 1.3 percent since early 2008. With the current recovery in real GDP on a trajectory of 2.3 percent annual growth-2 percentage points below the norm of past cycles-it is tough to justify the widespread praise of QE.

Japan's massive QQE campaign has faced similar traction problems. After expanding its balance sheet to nearly 60 percent of GDP-double the size of the Fed's-the BOJ is finding that its campaign to end deflation is increasingly ineffective. Japan has lapsed back into recession, and the BOJ has just cut the inflation target for this year from 1.7 percent to 1 percent.

Finally, QE also disappoints in terms of time consistency. The Fed has long qualified its post-QE normalization strategy with a host of data-dependent conditions pertaining to the state of the economy and/or inflation risks. Moreover, it is now relying on ambiguous adjectives to provide guidance to financial markets, having recently shifted from stating that it would maintain low rates for a "considerable" time to pledging to be "patient" in determining when to raise rates.

In the QE era, monetary policy has lost any semblance of discipline and coherence. As ECB President Mario Draghi attempts to deliver on his nearly two-and-a-half-year-old commitment, the limits of his promise-like comparable assurances by the Fed and the BOJ-could become glaringly apparent. Like lemmings at the cliff's edge, central banks seem steeped in denial of the risks they face.

The author is a faculty member at Yale University and former chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia. Project Syndicate

Hot Topics

Editor's Picks
...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 丝袜+亚洲+另类+欧美+变态 | 色免费视频 | 最新日韩av | 国产视频亚洲精品 | 亚洲欧美中文日韩v在线观看 | av一二三区 | 亚洲精品视频在线看 | 久久久久久久一区 | 99国产精品99久久久久久 | 国产精品久久久一区二区 | 色婷网| 久久久成人av | 男人的天堂免费 | 日韩av电影观看 | 日日夜夜爽 | 欧美激情国产日韩精品一区18 | 国产精品三级久久久久久电影 | 日韩免费在线观看视频 | 91亚洲国产成人久久精品网站 | 久久久久久久国产精品 | 国产精品有限公司 | 免费看91 | 中文字幕99 | 欧美日本韩国一区二区三区 | 日日操综合| 色片在线看 | 日韩精品一区二区三区中文字幕 | 91在线视频播放 | 国产成人精品一区二区在线 | 国产免费自拍 | 亚洲精品在线免费观看视频 | 九九久久国产 | 欧美激情综合五月色丁香小说 | 精品一区二区三区免费毛片爱 | 秋霞a级毛片在线看 | 国产欧美一区二区精品婷婷 | 最新免费av网站 | 欧美视频在线一区 | 日本美女一区二区 | 免费v片在线观看 | 在线看污视频网站 |