ååãã£ãã³ã·ã£ã«ã»ã¿ã¤ã ãºãæ¥æ¬çµæ¸ã«è¨åãã社説ã¯9æ27æ¥ä»ããJapanese stimulusãï¼åç §ï¼ã ã£ããå 容ã¯ãç¾å¨å½ä¼ã§è°è«ä¸ã®è£æ£äºç®ã ãã§ã¯æ¥æ¬ã®å¼·åºãªããã¬ããã®è±å´ã«ã¯å¹æããªãã®ã§ãæ¥éã«å®è³ªãªãã¬æ¿çã¨ãªãéèæ¿çãå®æ½ããã¨ããæè¨ã ã£ãã復ç¿ããã¨ããã ã Given the constraints of Japanâs public debt, there may be more room for monetary than fiscal expansion. At 0.1 per cent, nominal interest rates cannot get much lower, but falling prices make real rates higher than desirable. æ¥æ¬ã®è²¡æ¿èµ¤åã¨ããå¶ç´ããããã°ã財æ¿æ¯åºããéèæ¿
{{#tags}}- {{label}}
{{/tags}}