Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- URL disclaimer
- 1 Introduction: the transmission mechanism and monetary policy
- 2 Are the effects of monetary policy in the euro area greater in recessions than in booms?
- 3 Supply shocks and the ‘natural rate of interest’: an exploration
- 4 Some econometric issues in measuring the monetary transmission mechanism, with an application to developing countries
- 5 Central bank goals, institutional change and monetary policy: evidence from the United States and the United Kingdom
- 6 The transmission mechanism of monetary policy near zero interest rates: the Japanese experience, 1998–2000
- 7 What does the UK's monetary policy and inflation experience tell us about the transmission mechanism?
- 8 Modelling the transmission mechanism of monetary policy
- 9 Empirical evidence for credit effects in the transmission mechanism of the United Kingdom
- 10 Uncovered interest parity with fundamentals: a Brazilian exchange rate forecast model
- 11 Uncovered interest parity and the monetary transmission mechanism
- Bibliography
- Index
6 - The transmission mechanism of monetary policy near zero interest rates: the Japanese experience, 1998–2000
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- URL disclaimer
- 1 Introduction: the transmission mechanism and monetary policy
- 2 Are the effects of monetary policy in the euro area greater in recessions than in booms?
- 3 Supply shocks and the ‘natural rate of interest’: an exploration
- 4 Some econometric issues in measuring the monetary transmission mechanism, with an application to developing countries
- 5 Central bank goals, institutional change and monetary policy: evidence from the United States and the United Kingdom
- 6 The transmission mechanism of monetary policy near zero interest rates: the Japanese experience, 1998–2000
- 7 What does the UK's monetary policy and inflation experience tell us about the transmission mechanism?
- 8 Modelling the transmission mechanism of monetary policy
- 9 Empirical evidence for credit effects in the transmission mechanism of the United Kingdom
- 10 Uncovered interest parity with fundamentals: a Brazilian exchange rate forecast model
- 11 Uncovered interest parity and the monetary transmission mechanism
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The Bank of Japan (BOJ) has gone through a unique experience in the past few years. When I joined the Bank's newly formed policy board in April 1998, the overnight call market rate, the key policy instrument of the BOJ, was already below 0.5%. The economy was in the midst of the most serious recession in the postwar period, although it took us a little while to realise this. We guided the call rate down to virtually zero in the first quarter of 1999 and followed up by promising to keep it there until deflationary concerns had been dispelled. Finally, in August 2000, we brought the rate up to 25 basis points after having kept the zero rate for one and a half years.
In this short paper, I would like to discuss some of the key aspects of the evolution of our thinking on monetary policy over the period 1998–2000. In so doing, I would like to focus specifically on the characteristics of the 1997–98 Japanese recession, the transmission process of monetary policy in the neighbourhood of a zero rate and the background thinking behind the rate hike in August 2000.
The nature of the 1997–98 recession
It is appropriate to begin with a brief discussion of the nature of the recession that started in 1997(Q4), which is what the BOJ was trying to respond to in 1998–2000.
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- Monetary Transmission in Diverse Economies , pp. 127 - 136Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002
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