Markets, Deals & Companies
What does it mean that monetary policy works with 'long and variable lags,' and why does that create risk?
Model answer
It means a change in the policy rate doesn't hit the real economy immediately — it transmits through borrowing costs, credit availability, asset prices, and confidence over several quarters (often…
The full, human-reviewed answer is in the bank.
Sign up free and Daily 10 serves you 10 questions a day from all 1,500+ — or go Pro for unlimited reps.
More from Markets, Deals & Companies
- What is the Federal Reserve's dual mandate, and why does it matter for how you read policy?
- What is the federal funds rate, what does the Fed actually control, and how does that transmit to the economy?
- Walk me through the yield curve: what is it, what's a 'normal' shape, and what does the slope encode?
- Why is an inverted yield curve historically a recession signal, and what are the caveats?
- Distinguish a bull steepener, bear steepener, bull flattener, and bear flattener. What does each imply?
- What's the difference between nominal and real interest rates, and where do you see the real rate quoted in markets?