Quantitative
in sentence
681 examples of Quantitative in a sentence
Indeed, the question has been asked at least since May 2013, when then-Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke famously announced that
quantitative
easing would be “tapered” later that year, causing long-term US interest rates to rise and prompting a reversal of capital flows to emerging markets.
Greece was never included the ECB’s
quantitative
easing program, for two reasons: its debt burden was too large to service in the long term, even with the help of ECB-sponsored low interest rates, and the ECB was under pressure, mainly from Germany, to wind down the program.
Even before the recent Middle East political shocks, oil prices had risen above $80-$90 a barrel, an increase driven not only by energy-thirsty emerging-market economies, but also by non-fundamental factors: a wall of liquidity chasing assets and commodities in emerging markets, owing to near-zero interest rates and
quantitative
easing in advanced economies; momentum and herding behavior; and limited and inelastic oil supplies.
Likewise, successive rounds of
quantitative
easing by the US Federal Reserve in 2009-2014, the Bank of Japan since 2013, and the European Central Bank since earlier this year, resulted in depreciations of the dollar, yen, and euro, respectively.
True prudence requires that regulators avail themselves of a broader set of policy instruments, including
quantitative
ceilings, transaction taxes, restrictions on securitization, prohibitions, or other direct inhibitions on financial transactions – all of which are anathema to most financial market participants.
Lower oil prices, a cheaper euro, and
quantitative
easing by the European Central Bank are all expected to boost growth.
The benefits of
quantitative
easing are also likely to prove ephemeral.
Quantitative
easing does improve funding conditions for the few eurozone companies large enough to tap capital markets.
In 2010, the Fed began hinting at a second round of
quantitative
easing, or QE2.
They have experimented with
quantitative
easing.
Since 2009,
quantitative
easing (QE) by the US Federal Reserve has resulted in record-low interest rates around the world.
One of the goals of large-scale bond purchases – so-called
quantitative
easing – was to drive down long-term interest rates in order to stimulate business investment and housing construction.
While we do not know what might have happened were policies different, one can easily imagine that, absent
quantitative
easing in the United States, Europe, and Japan, those economies would have been mired in a deflationary post-crisis landscape akin to that of the 1930s.
But what about the vast
quantitative
easing (printing of money) that has been occurring?
Data from Europe and the US show that M3 has been falling for most of 2009, despite exceptionally low interest rates and
quantitative
easing.
Still, we must accept that central banks’ large-scale
quantitative
easing takes them into uncharted territory, where the boundary between monetary and fiscal policy is blurred.
His business experience gave him contacts across both the Channel and the Atlantic, as well as an ability to see things in
quantitative
terms.
The Fed’s policy of
quantitative
easing exacerbates the flow of excess liquidity, which could result in dangerous bubbles in emerging markets.
But what will happen when the US recovers, reverses
quantitative
easing, and starts hiking interest rates?
By maintaining its policy of
quantitative
easing (QE) – which entails monthly purchases of long-term assets worth $85 billion – the Fed is courting an increasingly treacherous endgame at home and abroad.
It has shifted its focus from the price of credit to influencing the credit cycle’s quantity dimension through the liquidity injections that
quantitative
easing requires.
The fifth, and most recent, factor is the US Federal Reserve’s signals that it might end its policy of
quantitative
easing earlier than expected, and its hints of an eventual exit from zero interest rates, both of which have caused turbulence in emerging economies’ financial markets.
In Japan,
quantitative
easing was the first “arrow” of “Abenomics,” Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s reform program.
The upward pressure on the US dollar from the embrace of
quantitative
easing by the ECB and the BOJ has been sharp.
In the weakest of the three, by contrast, the ECB has no intention of boosting growth through
quantitative
easing or interest-rate pre-commitments.
At a minimum, the ECB will probably need to match the $1 trillion annual US rate of
quantitative
easing, and front-load much of it.
Fiddling at the FirePARIS – Financial markets have rallied since July on the hope that the global economic and geopolitical outlook will not worsen, or, if it does, that central banks stand ready to backstop economies and markets with additional rounds of liquidity provision and
quantitative
easing.
Indeed, the post-crisis experience of
quantitative
easing has highlighted monetary policy's relative powerlessness to offset the global deflationary trend.
But now the ECB is attempting to break the impasse through
quantitative
easing (QE).
Equitable human development requires that policymakers pay more attention to the quality of outcomes, rather than focusing primarily on
quantitative
measures of change.
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