Unconventional
in sentence
476 examples of Unconventional in a sentence
According to current projections, technological innovations in
unconventional
energy will allow the US to meet more than 80% of its oil demand from sources in North and South America by 2020.
With most advanced economies pivoting too quickly to fiscal retrenchment, the burden of reviving growth was placed almost entirely on
unconventional
monetary policies, which have diminishing returns (if not counter-productive effects).
It will be no less difficult to leave behind
unconventional
monetary policies, as the US Federal Reserve recently suggested by signaling that it will normalize policy interest rates more slowly than expected.
By contrast, the Fed’s QE balance-sheet adjustments were
unconventional
and, therefore, untested from the start.
He argued that the Fed’s balance-sheet tools are merely extensions of its traditional approach, stressing that “conventional and
unconventional
monetary policy works through the same channels, with the same mechanism.”
We can only hope that circumstances don’t require another
unconventional
policy experiment such as QE.
Against this background, NATO should pursue a new arms-control dialogue with the goal of boosting transparency concerning military capabilities relevant for
unconventional
warfare and providing early warning of destabilizing moves that are not quite acts of war.
Thus, we have the unseemly spectacle of the ECB hesitating to cut interest rates for fear that, having exhausted conventional policy, it would have to turn to
unconventional
measures like quantitative easing, which would antagonize German public opinion even more.
But if its leaders are worried about the impact on its reputation of embracing
unconventional
policy, they should pause and reflect on the much greater damage that would follow from allowing the economy to slip into a deflationary trap from which it would be difficult, if not impossible, to escape.
At home, all that is left is
unconventional
monetary policy.
With the outbreak of the global crisis, major advanced economies employed
unconventional
monetary policies, leading to massive capital flows to emerging-market economies, which lowered borrowing costs and increased access to credit.
Colombia, Peru, Brazil, and other countries in the group have also used a range of
unconventional
policy tools – especially changes in reserve requirements for bank liabilities of varying maturities and currency denominations – to manage liquidity and credit.
Unconventional
monetary policy was most evident during the crisis.
In response, monetary authorities have signaled not just that they will cut rates, but also that they will use an array of
unconventional
measures to prop up growth.
In both countries, demonstrations have been banned; places of worship have been closed; and hundreds of people have been detained and interrogated for having voiced an
unconventional
opinion.
The New Abnormal in Monetary PolicyNEW YORK – Financial markets are starting to get rattled by the winding down of
unconventional
monetary policies in many advanced economies.
Soon enough, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) and the Swiss National Bank (SNB) will be the only central banks still maintaining
unconventional
monetary policies for the long term.
Still, all of these central banks will have to reintroduce
unconventional
monetary policies if another recession or financial crisis occurs.
Consider the Fed, which is in a stronger position than any other central bank to depart from
unconventional
monetary policies.
When that still did not boost the economy, the Fed began to pursue
unconventional
monetary policies, by launching QE for the first time.
To reach a target of 4% inflation, they might have to implement even more
unconventional
monetary policies over an even longer period of time.
A lower inflation target would alleviate the need for
unconventional
policies when rates are close to 0% and inflation is still below 2%.
In other words, central banks will have to confront the same policy dilemmas that attended the global financial crisis, including the “choice” of whether to pursue
unconventional
monetary policies.
Given that financial push is bound to come to economic shove once again,
unconventional
monetary policies, it would seem, are here to stay.
But they can also employ a range of other
unconventional
tools more aggressively, from asset purchases (so-called quantitative easing) to negative interest rates.
Domestic demand may not respond to
unconventional
policy.
Moreover, facing distorted domestic bond prices stemming from
unconventional
policy, pension funds and insurance companies may look to buy them in less distorted markets abroad.
An example of a red policy would be when
unconventional
monetary policies do little to boost a country’s domestic demand – but lead to large capital outflows that provoke asset-price bubbles in emerging markets.
Unconventional
measures were necessary to prevent their economies from collapsing.
Rather than boosting credit to the real economy,
unconventional
monetary policies have mostly lifted the wealth of the very rich – the main beneficiaries of asset reflation.
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