Publications
Policy Note 2014/6
| December 2014
Why Raising Rates May Speed the Recovery
Criticisms of the Federal Reserve’s “unconventional” monetary policy response to the Great Recession have been of two types. On the one hand, the tripling in the size of the Fed’s balance sheet has led to forecasts of rampant inflation in the belief that the massive increase in excess reserves might be spent on goods and services. And even worse, this would represent an attempt by government to inflate away its high levels of debt created to support the solvency of financial institutions after the September 2008 collapse of asset prices. On the other hand, it is argued that the near-zero short-term interest rate policy and measures to flatten the yield curve (quantitative easing plus "Operation Twist") distort the allocation and pricing in the credit and capital markets and will underwrite another asset price bubble, even as deflation prevails in product markets.
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Author(s):
Jan Kregel
Related Topic(s):
Central bank policy
Economic recovery
Federal Reserve
Quantitative easing (QE)
Unconventional monetary policies
Zero interest rate policy (ZIRP)