25.2 Lessons for Monetary Policy
1) Analysis of the transmission mechanisms of monetary policy provides four basic lessons for a
central bank’s conduct of monetary policy. These lessons include the following.
A) Rising interest rates indicate a tightening of monetary policy, whereas falling interest rates
indicate an easing of monetary policy.
B) Monetary policy can be highly effective in reviving a weak economy even if short-term
interest rates are already near zero.
C) Avoiding fluctuations in the level of unemployment is an important objective of monetary
policy, thus providing a rationale for interest-rate stability as the primary long-run goal for
monetary policy.
D) Other asset prices beside those on short-term debt instruments do not contain important
information about the stance of monetary policy because they are not important elements in
various monetary policy transmission mechanisms.
2) Analysis of the transmission mechanisms of monetary policy provides four basic lessons for a
central bank’s conduct of monetary policy. Which of the following is NOT one of these lessons?
A) Rising interest rates indicate a tightening of monetary policy, whereas falling interest rates
indicate an easing of monetary policy.
B) Monetary policy can be highly effective in reviving a weak economy even if short-term
interest rates are already near zero.
C) Avoiding unanticipated fluctuations in the price level is an important objective of monetary
policy, thus providing a rationale for price stability as the primary long-run goal for monetary
policy.
D) Other asset prices beside those on short-term debt instruments do not contain important
information about the stance of monetary policy because they are important elements in various
monetary policy transmission mechanisms.
3) From 1990s until 2012, the Japanese economy has experienced
A) easy monetary policy as indicated by falling nominal interest rates.
B) easy monetary policy as indicated by short-term interest rates near zero.
C) tight monetary policy as indicated by falling asset prices.
D) tight monetary policy as indicated by short-term interest rates near zero.