Managing the Exit: Lessons from Japan's Reversal of Unconventional Monetary Policy
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Summary:
In responding to the global crisis, central banks in several advanced economies ventured beyond traditional monetary policy. A variety of unorthodox measures, including purchases of public and private assets, have significantly enlarged their balance sheets. As recoveries take hold, focus will increasingly shift from countering the Great Recession to orchestrating an exit and returning to a more normal monetary framework. Five years ago, as its economy recovered from a severe financial crisis, Japan attempted just such an exit. This note revisits the Bank of Japan’s experience and draws potential lessons for managing an orderly exit today, with a focus on technical aspects, practicalities, and communication strategies. While the nature of the assets acquired during the present crisis could pose additional complications, parts of Japan’s arsenal—communication, flexibility, a sufficient set of policy tools and a strategy for using them, safeguards against potential losses, the revival of risk appetite through decisive restructuring of balance sheets, and refinements to the monetary framework upon exit—also could be important this time around.
Series:
Working Paper No. 2010/114
Subject:
Asset and liability management Banking Central bank policy rate Financial institutions Financial services Financial statements Liquidity Monetary policy Public financial management (PFM) Stocks Unconventional monetary policies
English
Publication Date:
May 1, 2010
ISBN/ISSN:
9781455200733/1018-5941
Stock No:
WPIEA2010114
Pages:
14
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