Summary:
MMT economists have been saying that the government acting through its central bank has this power as currency monopolist to manage the yield curve in addition to setting the policy rate, if it chooses to use it. What difference does this make? The 5 and 10 year rates serve as benchmarks for commercial lending. Since housing is such an integral part of the economy, mortgage rates are especially influential and it has been argued that central bank interest setting acts primarily through the housing channel. So flattening the yield curve would make a difference.MarketWatchThe Fed is dusting off a QE replacement, last used during World War II Greg Robb | Senior Economics Reporter
Topics:
Mike Norman considers the following as important: central banking, currency monopoly, MMT, yield curve
This could be interesting, too:
MMT economists have been saying that the government acting through its central bank has this power as currency monopolist to manage the yield curve in addition to setting the policy rate, if it chooses to use it. What difference does this make? The 5 and 10 year rates serve as benchmarks for commercial lending. Since housing is such an integral part of the economy, mortgage rates are especially influential and it has been argued that central bank interest setting acts primarily through the housing channel. So flattening the yield curve would make a difference.MarketWatchThe Fed is dusting off a QE replacement, last used during World War II Greg Robb | Senior Economics Reporter
Topics:
Mike Norman considers the following as important: central banking, currency monopoly, MMT, yield curve
This could be interesting, too:
Matias Vernengo writes More on the possibility and risks of a recession
Mike Norman writes Jared Bernstein, total idiot. You have to see this to believe it.
Steve Roth writes MMT and the Wealth of Nations, Revisited
NewDealdemocrat writes The “bearish steepening” and the death of refinancing
What difference does this make? The 5 and 10 year rates serve as benchmarks for commercial lending. Since housing is such an integral part of the economy, mortgage rates are especially influential and it has been argued that central bank interest setting acts primarily through the housing channel. So flattening the yield curve would make a difference.
MarketWatch
The Fed is dusting off a QE replacement, last used during World War II
Greg Robb | Senior Economics Reporter