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240607 ||| eng |
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|a 9798400270864
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100 |
1 |
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|a Erceg, Christopher
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245 |
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|a Central Bank Exit Strategies Domestic Transmission and International Spillovers
|c Christopher Erceg, Marcin Kolasa, Jesper Lindé, Haroon Mumtaz, Pawel Zabczyk
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260 |
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|a Washington, D.C.
|b International Monetary Fund
|c 2024
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300 |
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|a 55 pages
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653 |
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|a Interest rates
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653 |
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|a Economics
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653 |
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|a Exchange rate arrangements
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653 |
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|a Financial services
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653 |
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|a Deflation
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653 |
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|a Open Economy Macroeconomics
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653 |
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|a Quantitative Policy Modeling
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653 |
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|a Unconventional monetary policies
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653 |
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|a Economics of specific sectors
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653 |
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|a Foreign Exchange
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653 |
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|a Currency crises
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653 |
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|a Bonds
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653 |
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|a Macroeconomics
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653 |
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|a Banking
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653 |
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|a Foreign exchange
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653 |
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|a Economic & financial crises & disasters
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653 |
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|a Inflation
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653 |
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|a Monetary economics
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653 |
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|a Financial institutions
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653 |
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|a Economics: General
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653 |
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|a Currency
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653 |
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|a Informal sector
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653 |
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|a General Financial Markets: General (includes Measurement and Data)
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653 |
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|a Investments: Bonds
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653 |
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|a Price Level
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653 |
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|a Banks and Banking
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653 |
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|a Prices
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653 |
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|a Monetary policy
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653 |
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|a Central Banks and Their Policies
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653 |
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|a Interest Rates: Determination, Term Structure, and Effects
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653 |
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|a Investment & securities
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653 |
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|a Monetary Policy
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653 |
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|a Money and Monetary Policy
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653 |
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|a Central bank policy rate
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700 |
1 |
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|a Kolasa, Marcin
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700 |
1 |
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|a Lindé, Jesper
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700 |
1 |
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|a Mumtaz, Haroon
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041 |
0 |
7 |
|a eng
|2 ISO 639-2
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989 |
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|b IMF
|a International Monetary Fund
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490 |
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|a IMF Working Papers
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028 |
5 |
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|a 10.5089/9798400270864.001
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856 |
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|u https://elibrary.imf.org/view/journals/001/2024/073/001.2024.issue-073-en.xml?cid=546938-com-dsp-marc
|x Verlag
|3 Volltext
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|a 330
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|a We study alternative approaches to the withdrawal of prolonged unconventional monetary stimulus (“exit strategies”) by central banks in large, advanced economies. We first show empirically that large-scale asset purchases affect the exchange rate and domestic and foreign term premiums more strongly than conventional short-term policy rate changes when normalizing by the effects on domestic GDP. We then build a two-country New Keynesian model that features segmented bond markets, cognitive discounting and strategic complementarities in price setting that is consistent with these findings. The model implies that quantitative easing (QE) is the only effective way to provide monetary stimulus when policy rates are persistently constrained by the effective lower bound, and that QE is likely to have larger domestic output effects than quantitative tightening (QT). We demonstrate that “exit strategies” by large advanced economies that rely heavily on QT can trigger sizeable inflation-output tradeoffs in foreign recipient economies through the exchange rate and term premium channels. We also show that these tradeoffs are likely to be stronger in emerging market economies, especially those with fixed exchange rates
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