The key existential question is: Will the worldwide effort contain the mortality and morbidity as also the macroeconomic consequences of COVID-19?
Select Central Banks in Response to COVID-19 Outbreak |
Central Bank |
Measures |
People’s Bank of China
|
- 1.7 trillion yuan of liquidity injected on February 3 and 4
- Rate on 200 billion yuan worth of one-year medium-term lending facility loans to financial institutions lowered by 10 bps to 3.15 per cent on February 17
- 1-year Loan Prime Rate lowered by 10 bps to 4.05 per cent effective February 20, 2020; 5-year LPR lowered by 5 bps to 4.75 per cent
- Reduction in reserve requirement ratio for select banks
- 7-day reverse repo rate lowered by 20 bps to 2.2 per cent on March 30
|
Federal Reserve
|
- Target range of the federal funds rate lowered by 50 bps on March 3 and a further 100 bps on March 16 to 0-0.25 per cent
- Unlimited asset purchases, commercial mortgage-backed securities included in the asset purchase programme
- Lowering of primary credit rate to 0.25 per cent
- Banks allowed to use capital and liquidity buffers for lending
- Reserve requirement reduced to 0 per cent from March 26
- Additional repo operations
- Primary Dealer Credit Facility established
- Commercial Paper Funding Facility established
- Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility established
- Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility established
- Primary Market Corporate Credit Facility and the Secondary Market Corporate Credit Facility established to support credit to large employers
- The existing dollar liquidity swap line arrangements with five central banks (EU, UK, Japan, Canada and Switzerland) made lower cost, with more frequent and longer-term operations
- Temporary swap lines with central banks of Australia, Brazil, Denmark, South Korea, Mexico, Norway, New Zealand, Singapore and Sweden established
- Temporary repurchase agreement facility for foreign and international monetary authorities (FIMA Repo Facility) established to help support the smooth functioning of financial markets, including the US Treasury market
|
European Central Bank
|
- Additional longer-term refinancing operations (LTROs) to provide immediate liquidity support to the euro area financial system till June 2020
- More favourable terms under TLTRO III from June 2020 to June 2021, to support bank lending to those affected most by the spread of COVID-19
- Additional net asset purchases of €120 billion until end 2020
- Banks allowed to use capital and liquidity buffers, including Pillar 2 Guidance
- €750 billion Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme (PEPP) to be conducted until end-2020 in a flexible manner, to include purchase of Greek government debt
- Non-financial commercial paper included in asset purchases
- Collateral standards eased for ECB’s refinancing operations
|
Bank of England
|
- Bank Rate reduced in two steps of 50 bps and 15 bps to all-time low of 0.1 per cent on March 19
- Additional purchases of £200 billion to be done in 2020
- A new Term Funding Scheme with additional incentives for Small and Medium-sized Enterprises introduced
- Counter-cyclical capital buffer rate reduced to 0 per cent of banks’ exposures to UK borrowers effective March 11.
- Supervisory guidance on dividends and other distributions issued
- Other supervisory and prudential policy measures including cancellation of annual stress test of banks in 2020
- Covid Corporate Financing Facility launched, in association with the Government
- Contingent Term Repo Facility activated
|
Bank of Japan
|
- Provide loans against corporate debt as collateral at 0 per cent with maturity up to one year
- Additional 2 trillion yen purchases of commercial paper and corporate bonds
- Double the annual pace of purchases of exchange traded funds and J-REITs
|
Bank of Korea
|
- Base Rate lowered by 50 bps to 0.75 per cent on March 17
- Interest rate on the Bank Intermediated Lending Support Facility reduced to 0.25 per cent and the ceiling on the facility increased by 5 trillion won
- Collateral for open market operations broadened
- Unlimited liquidity through weekly 91-day repo auctions
- Forex market stability rules eased
|
Bank Indonesia
|
- Policy rate lowered by 25 bps each in February and March to 4.5 per cent effective March 19, 2020
- Daily repo auctions of 12-month tenor introduced
- Frequency of forex swap auctions increased
- Triple intervention policy intensified to minimize the risk of increasing rupiah exchange rate volatility
- Forex reserve requirement for commercial banks halved to 4 per cent effective March 16, 2020
- Rupiah reserve requirement lowered by 50 bps for banks financing export-import activity, MSMEs and other priority sectors effective April 1, 2020
- Range of underlying transactions available to foreign investors expanded to provide alternative hedging instruments against rupiah holdings
|
Reserve Bank of Australia
|
- Cash rate target reduced in two steps of 25 bps each to a further all-time low of 0.25 per cent with effect from March 20
- Target set for the yield on 3-year government bonds of around 0.25 per cent, to be achieved through secondary market purchases
- Term funding facility for the banking system, with particular support for credit to small and medium-sized businesses instituted
- Exchange settlement balances to be remunerated at 10 bps
|
Bank of Canada
|
- Reduced key rate in three steps of 50 bps each to 0.25 per cent in March
- Announced purchase of government securities, minimum purchase of $5 billion per week
- Bankers’ Acceptance Purchase Facility launched
- Provincial Money Market Purchase announced
- Standing Term Liquidity Facility established
- Commercial Paper Purchase Program launched
|
Sources: Websites of central banks; |
References:
IMF (2020), https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2020/03/23/pr2098-imf-managing-directorstatement-following-a-g20-ministerial-call-on-the-coronavirus-emergency.
World Bank (2020), “East Asia and Pacific in the Time of COVID-19”, East Asia and Pacific Economic Update, April.
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