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Insufficiency of Conventional Monetary Policy After the 2007-2009 Crisis
Following the 2007–2009 global financial crisis, many central banks cut their policy interest rates to nearly zero. Despite this aggressive conventional response, the stimulus was inadequate to lift aggregate demand to its potential level, demonstrating the limitations of traditional monetary policy in a severe downturn and necessitating the use of other measures.
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Ch.5 Macroeconomic policy: Inflation and unemployment - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Ch.6 The financial sector: Debt, money, and financial markets - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Asymmetry in Monetary Policy Effectiveness Against Inflation vs. Deflation
The Need for Negative Real Interest Rates in a Deep Recession
Argument for Raising Inflation Targets to Mitigate ZLB Risks
A central bank is attempting to combat a severe recession by setting its nominal policy interest rate to -0.5%. Which of the following best explains why this policy is likely to be ineffective at stimulating the economy?
Monetary Policy Limitations in a Downturn
If an economy is experiencing a 2% annual rate of deflation (a sustained fall in the general price level), a central bank's policy of setting the nominal interest rate to 0% will successfully create a negative real interest rate to stimulate spending.
The Floor on Policy Interest Rates
The Real Interest Rate Floor at the Zero Lower Bound
Insufficiency of Conventional Monetary Policy After the 2007-2009 Crisis
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Central Bank Policy Evaluation
Limitations of Interest Rate Policy in Severe Recessions
Imagine a country's central bank responds to a severe economic recession by repeatedly cutting its primary policy interest rate. After several months, the rate is at 0.05%, but economic growth remains stagnant and unemployment is high. Which statement best analyzes the fundamental limitation of this conventional policy approach in such a scenario?
The primary reason conventional monetary policy was insufficient to stimulate the economy after the 2007-2009 financial crisis was the reluctance of central banks to reduce their policy interest rates aggressively.
Quantitative Easing (QE)
Limitations of Policymaker Control Over the Economy
Policy Responses to Insufficient Monetary Stimulus