Quantitative
in sentence
681 examples of Quantitative in a sentence
In any case, one would not expect prize committees or historians to judge leaders solely by
quantitative
criteria.
Nonetheless, though monetary policy has not helped to kick-start growth in the eurozone, many observers continue to argue that, in order to help governments address their fiscal challenges, the ECB must launch
quantitative
easing (large-scale purchases of long-term assets).
The last time the Fed raised interest rates was in 2006, before the growth-sapping impact of the global financial crisis persuaded it and other central banks to lower rates effectively to zero and to employ so-called
quantitative
easing (QE) to pump money into advanced economies.
Quantitative
easing is constrained by above-target inflation in the eurozone and UK.
The US Federal Reserve will likely start a third round of
quantitative
easing (QE3), but it will be too little too late.
Further
quantitative
easing, such as by the European Central Bank, could be directed toward greener asset-backed securities.
As the ongoing recession exhausts the traditional instruments of monetary policy, central banks are opting for new rounds of
quantitative
easing (QE).
Moreover, the Fed has left the door open to more
quantitative
easing next year – a tacit acknowledgement that the recovery will be long and sluggish.
As long as the tailwinds of global
quantitative
easing, cheap oil, and further institutional inflows keep blowing, equities could continue to rally.
“Still to be argued out within the guild [of economists],” Samuelson wrote in 1969, “is the proper
quantitative
potency of monetary versus fiscal policy.”
A step toward normalization of interest-rate spreads – which
quantitative
easing has made exaggeratedly low – should not be cause for panic.
Frankfurt is a divided city, policy-wise: the Bundesbank opposes
quantitative
easing and negative policy rates, while the European Central Bank is ready to do more.
The experiment, now known as
quantitative
easing, was a success – or so we thought.
It raised the stakes with additional rounds of
quantitative
easing, QE2 and QE3, but real GDP growth remained stuck at around 2% from 2010 through 2017 — half the norm of past recoveries.
When cutting interest rates to historically low levels failed to revive growth, central banks took to so-called
quantitative
easing: injecting liquidity into economies by buying long-term government and other bonds.
In the case of the European Central Bank, there is a technical reason: to increase the supply of high-class bonds for President Mario Draghi’s ongoing program of
quantitative
easing.
ECB President Mario Draghi often hints at
quantitative
easing – last month, he repeated that, “if required, we will act swiftly with further monetary policy easing” – but his perpetual lack of commitment resembles that of Mark Carney, the governor of the Bank of England, whom one former UK government minister recently compared to an “unreliable boyfriend.”
So we will have to rely on Draghi and
quantitative
easing to save the euro from Germany.
America’s Strategy VacuumNEW HAVEN – Apparently, policymakers at the Federal Reserve are having second thoughts about the wisdom of open-ended
quantitative
easing (QE).
Macri took over the presidency with a bang, launching an audacious – and highly risky – strategy that places aggressive price liberalization and the removal of
quantitative
controls front and center, ahead of the five measures relating to demand management and financial assistance.
To be sure, central banks technically should do whatever it takes to meet their inflation targets; but excessive
quantitative
easing has imposed high costs, and seems to have favored the few at the expense of the many.
Expansionary monetary policy – that is, massive injections of liquidity through so-called
quantitative
easing – is clearly not enough, either.
Putting Deflation FirstCAMBRIDGE – The European Central Bank is moving, hesitantly but ineluctably, toward
quantitative
easing.
But Draghi and his colleagues will proceed in small steps, given fears in Germany that
quantitative
easing is just another name for runaway inflation.
When the problem is deflation,
quantitative
easing will help only by transforming expectations.
Opponents of
quantitative
easing worry that it augurs inflation – a peculiar position, given the European economy’s current slack.
The most influential objection to
quantitative
easing is that it will relieve the pressure on European governments to reform.
Only full-bore
quantitative
easing can do that.
A better approach to reducing unemployment would be a new and expanded round of
quantitative
easing.
The US is experiencing several positive economic trends: housing is recovering; shale gas and oil will reduce energy costs and boost competitiveness; job creation is improving; rising labor costs in Asia and the advent of robotics and automation are underpinning a manufacturing resurgence; and aggressive
quantitative
easing is helping both the real economy and financial markets.
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