Interest and Quantitative easing: Difference between pages

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#The amount, usually expressed as an annual percentage of the principal, charged for borrowing money, or earned from a fixed income investment or from a floating interest rate investment.
''Monetary policy.''
#Any difference between a terminal value and a present value, often expressed as a money amount (though it can also be expressed as a percentage).
 
(QE).
 
Quantitative easing is a form of monetary policy used to stimulate an economy where interest rates are either at, or close to, zero.  
 
It involves a central bank buying financial assets, and its effect is to increase the money supply.
 
 
The financial assets bought are usually central government debt.




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Dual currency bond]]
* [[Asset Purchase Facility]]
* [[Gross interest]]
* [[Asset purchase programme]]
* [[Interest rate]]
* [[Balance sheet reduction policy]]
* [[Interest rate differential]]
* [[Cash in the new post-crisis world]]
* [[Non-performing loan]]
* [[Central bank]]
* [[Paying agent]]
* [[Fiscal policy]]
* [[Present value]]
* [[Helicopter money]]
* [[Principal]]
* [[Monetary policy]]
* [[Self-financing loan]]
* [[Money supply]]
* [[Simple interest]]
* [[POMO]]
* [[Time value of money]]
* [[QE2]]
* [[Yield]]
 
 
===Other links===
[https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/monetary-policy/quantitative-easing: What is quantitative easing, Bank of England]
 
[[Category:Long_term_funding]]

Revision as of 21:58, 24 April 2020

Monetary policy.

(QE).

Quantitative easing is a form of monetary policy used to stimulate an economy where interest rates are either at, or close to, zero.

It involves a central bank buying financial assets, and its effect is to increase the money supply.


The financial assets bought are usually central government debt.


See also


Other links

What is quantitative easing, Bank of England