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... Tool of monetary policy The rate that large financial institutions borrow money from each other Operating band – difference between Bank of Canada’s loan rate (bank rate) 4% and their interest rate 3.5% Therefore the overnight rate is somewhere between 3.5% and 4% Overnight rate is less than the ban ...
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Monetary Policy and the Econnomy

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Double Your Money!!

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(a) Which case gives rise to more inflation, a steep aggregate supply

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Negative Rates: Not Needed, Not Helpful
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MV = P x Y
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CLOUDY IN AMERICA, CLEARING IN CHINA

... political pressure to support U.S. bond prices if global demand declines. Fed action could keep long-term interest rates artificially low but would fail as investors flee the dollar. As of late 2009, the Fed was paying interest on more than US$ 1 trillion in excess reserves.That policy kept a lid on ...
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Interest-Free Treasury Bonds (IFTB)

... which are in compliance with Islamic Shariah (without any Shariah trick). One of them is “Interest-Free Treasury Bonds” or simply IFTB that can be issued by government treasury. . • In IFTB funds are exchanged in form of time-barter as “loan equal to future debt” or, “debt equal to future loan” with ...
File
File

... Cutting taxes AND increasing spending is impossible without putting the nation into serious debt. So, we usually have to pick one. This issue is one major difference between Democrats and Republicans. - Democrats prefer to increase govt. spending hoping to employ more people and encourage them to sp ...
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Quantitative easing

Quantitative easing (QE) is a type of monetary policy used by central banks to stimulate the economy when standard monetary policy has become ineffective. A central bank implements quantitative easing by buying financial assets from commercial banks and other financial institutions by using electronically created money, thus raising the prices of those financial assets and lowering their yield, while simultaneously increasing the money supply. This differs from the more usual policy of buying or selling short-term government bonds to keep interbank interest rates at a specified target value.Expansionary monetary policy to stimulate the economy typically involves the central bank buying short-term government bonds to lower short-term market interest rates. However, when short-term interest rates reach or approach zero, this method can no longer work. In such circumstances monetary authorities may then use quantitative easing to further stimulate the economy by buying assets of longer maturity than short-term government bonds, thereby lowering longer-term interest rates further out on the yield curve.Quantitative easing can help ensure that inflation does not fall below a target. Risks include the policy being more effective than intended in acting against deflation (leading to higher inflation in the longer term, due to increased money supply), or not being effective enough if banks do not lend out the additional reserves. According to the International Monetary Fund, the US Federal Reserve, and various other economists, quantitative easing undertaken since the global financial crisis of 2007–08 has mitigated some of the economic problems since the crisis.
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