Some economists say the BOJ has little power to weaken the yen with
monetary policy alone. Its quantitative easing is seen as overextended
after three years of aggressive asset purchases. Its setting of a
negative interest rate on some bank reserves in February has pushed
borrowing costs lower, but this hasn’t stimulated borrowing and the
policy remains widely unpopular.
The question of direct market
intervention by the Ministry of Finance, on the other hand, has been a
source of tension this year between Japanese and U.S. policy makers.
end partial quote from:
One of the problems of democracy is when something like Brexit happens and the people voting for it have no idea at all about Global Finance or world trade and how all that works. Brexit may just have started either another global Great Recession or even a Global Great Depression. It's hard to say at this point. We'll just have to see. But right now to many people it might look to them like Brexit just broke the back of the world economy for now.
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