Quantitative
in sentence
681 examples of Quantitative in a sentence
But another wave of global liquidity, prompted perhaps by a third round of
quantitative
easing in the United States, could upset this delicate equilibrium.
The Millennium Development Goals, which were set in the year 2000, established
quantitative
targets for the year 2015.
If these external disadvantages are not debilitating enough, this economy also maintains its own high barriers on international trade (in the form of state trading, import tariffs, and
quantitative
restrictions).
That, together with large-scale
quantitative
easing, has injected a massive $32 trillion into the global economy over the last nine years.
From 2009 to 2011, with advanced economies pursuing near-zero interest rates and
quantitative
easing, yield-hungry investors flooded countries like South Korea and Brazil with hot money, fueling currency appreciation and inflating asset bubbles.
This
quantitative
easing (QE) allowed the Fed to drive down long-term interest rates directly, leading to a rise in the stock market and to a recovery in prices of owner-occupied homes.
The second item on the agenda is a pull-back from
quantitative
easing in the US, which is subjecting the emerging economies to a flood of capital, rising commodity prices, inflation, and asset bubbles.
In the United Kingdom, banks have been criticized for not lending the reserves created by
quantitative
easing to the real economy, leading the Bank of England to introduce its “funding for lending” scheme in 2012.
Aggressive monetary expansion through
quantitative
easing is also far more complicated and politically contentious in a currency area with no federal debt for the central bank to buy.
Following the 2008 financial meltdown, the US Federal Reserve cut the policy rate to almost zero and pursued so-called
quantitative
easing (QE), by purchasing long-term securities from the public and private sectors.
Most obviously, the European Central Bank announced an ambitious program of asset purchases –
quantitative
easing – in late January.
Then, last month, when the Fed postponed its withdrawal from so-called
quantitative
easing, markets quickly turned euphoric.
The EU as a whole has attained none of the 17
quantitative
targets set in the Lisbon Strategy.
The US Federal Reserve led the charge among central banks, acting fast and aggressively in response to the global turmoil, by relying on a near-zero policy rate and massive asset purchases (so-called
quantitative
easing).
The liquidity injections of
quantitative
easing (QE) have shifted monetary-policy transmission channels away from interest rates to asset and currency markets.
When Easy Money EndsLONDON – The departure of US Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke has fueled speculation about when and how the Fed and other central banks will wind down their mammoth purchases of long-term assets, also known as
quantitative
easing (QE).
Finally, there is the
quantitative
question.
Indeed, last summer, when speculation that the Fed would soon begin to taper its purchases of long-term assets (so-called
quantitative
easing), financial-market pressures were strongest in markets suspected of having weak fundamentals.
The predictable side effect of
quantitative
easing (QE) – that is, the purchase of domestic bonds – by the BOJ and the ECB has been the depreciation of the yen and the euro.
All members would, in principle, be eligible, but premium rates would be differentiated and established on the basis of
quantitative
criteria.
When it recently fell into technical deflation, the European Central Bank finally pulled the trigger on aggressive easing and launched a combination of
quantitative
easing (including sovereign-bond purchases) and negative policy rates.
If the eurozone unemployment rate is still too high by the end of 2016, annual inflation remains well below the ECB’s 2% target, and fiscal policies and structural reforms exert a short-term drag on economic growth, the only game in town may be continued
quantitative
easing.
But, since the global financial crisis, the need to revive and sustain economic growth in the US, the United Kingdom, and Japan – and to avoid financial collapse in the eurozone – has prompted major central banks to be more outspoken and pursue more aggressive monetary policies, including unconventional measures like
quantitative
easing (QE).
Quantitative
Easing and the RenminbiCAMBRIDGE – The United States Federal Reserve’s policy of “quantitative easing” is reducing the value of the dollar relative to other currencies that have floating exchange rates.
The effect of
quantitative
easing on exchange rates between the dollar and the floating-rate currencies is a predictable result of the Fed’s plan to increase the supply of dollars.
In particular, since the European Central Bank has clearly rejected
quantitative
easing, investors will want to buy euro bonds issued by Germany and other European countries that are not in danger of default.
So the relevant question is how the Chinese government will choose to respond to the Fed’s
quantitative
easing and the impact of the Fed’s policy on other currencies.
It is significant that this policy was adopted before Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke’s speech in August, in which he announced his tentative plans for
quantitative
easing.
But it is clear that the fall of the renminbi against other currencies that has resulted from the Fed’s policy of
quantitative
easing now gives the Chinese scope for more rapid appreciation of the renminbi relative to the dollar.
In short, the Fed’s policy of
quantitative
easing is likely to accelerate the rise of the renminbi – an outcome that is in China’s interest no less than it is in America’s.
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