美联储非常规货币政策的宏观经济效应

Eric M. Engen, Thomas Laubach, D. Reifschneider
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引用次数: 153

摘要

在2008年底达到联邦基金利率的有效下限后,美联储转向了两种非常规政策工具——量化宽松和对联邦基金利率未来路径日益明确和前瞻性的指引——以提供额外的货币政策宽松。我们使用蓝筹经济指标(Blue Chip Economic Indicators)的调查数据来推断私营部门对美联储在脱离有效利率下限后将使用的隐性利率规则的看法变化。利用我们对隐性政策规则的私人预期随时间变化的估计,以及从其他研究中得出的美联储量化宽松计划对期限溢价的影响的估计,我们模拟了FRB/US模型,以评估自2009年初以来非常规政策提供的实际经济刺激。我们的分析表明,对实际活动和通胀的净刺激是有限的,因为政策预期和长期溢价效应变化的渐进式性质,以及公众对复苏步伐将比事实证明的要快得多的坚定信念。我们的分析表明,失业率峰值效应——相对于没有非常规政策行动的情况下,失业率将减少1.25%——要到2015年初才会出现,而通胀峰值效应——将使通胀率增加0.5个百分点——预计要到2016年初才会出现。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Macroeconomic Effects of the Federal Reserve's Unconventional Monetary Policies
After reaching the effective lower bound for the federal funds rate in late 2008, the Federal Reserve turned to two unconventional policy tools -- quantitative easing and increasingly explicit and forward-leaning guidance for the future path of the federal funds rate -- in order to provide additional monetary policy accommodation. We use survey data from the Blue Chip Economic Indicators to infer changes in private-sector perceptions of the implicit interest rate rule that the Federal Reserve would use following liftoff from the effective lower bound. Using our estimates of the changes over time in private expectations for the implicit policy rule, and estimates of the effects of the Federal Reserve's quantitative easing programs on term premiums derived from other studies, we simulate the FRB/US model to assess the actual economic stimulus provided by unconventional policy since early 2009. Our analysis suggests that the net stimulus to real activity and inflation was limited by the gradual nature of the changes in policy expectations and term premium effects, as well as by a persistent belief on the part of the public that the pace of recovery would be much faster than proved to be the case. Our analysis implies that the peak unemployment effect -- subtracting 1¼ percentage points from the unemployment rate relative to what would have occurred in the absence of the unconventional policy actions -- does not occur until early 2015, while the peak inflation effect -- adding ½ percentage point to the inflation rate -- is not anticipated until early 2016.
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