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There are, of course, other ways to stimulate the economy, varying interest rates are merely one very popular tool. The "liquidity trap" is a theory pointing to the impotence of monetary policy in depression situations, suggesting that fiscal expansion is needed instead.
John Maynard Keynes is usually seen as the inventor of the liquidity-trap theory. In his view, financial speculators are scared of suffering capital losses on non-money assets and thus hold money ( liquid assets) instead. These fears are most likely after a financial crisis such as that associated with the Stock Market Crash of 1929. Further, if interest rates are extremely low, there is no place for them to go but up. That implies that bond prices will likely fall in the near future, causing capital losses.A more recent view of the liquidity trap is that nominal interest rates cannot fall below zero, since no-one would voluntarily pay a borrower interest to borrow (i.e., pay negative nominal interest rates). This sets a minimum limit on interest rates, one that may be slightly above zero because of the liquidity advantages of holding money.
It has been suggested that the Japanese economy in the 1990's suffered from a "liquidity trap" scenario. This diagnosis prompted increased government spending and large budget deficits as a remedy. The failure of these measures to help the economy recover, combined with an explosion in the Japanese public debt suggest that fiscal policy may not have been adequate either. (Much of the government spending followed a stop/go pattern and involved spending on unneeded infrastructureInfrastructure is the set of interconnected structural elements that provide the framework for supporting the entire structure. The term is often used very abstractly. For instance, software engineering tools are sometimes described as part of the infrast.) American economist Paul KrugmanPaul Robin Krugman (born February 28, 1953) is an American economist. He is probably best known to the public as an outspoken and formidable critic of the economic and general policies of the administration of George W. Bush from his current post as a col suggests that, what was needed was a central bank committment to steady positive monetary growthThe zero interest rate policy (ZIRP) is a macroeconomics scheme devised by economist Paul Krugman for economies exhibiting slow growth with a very low interest rate, such as contemporary Japan. Under ZIRP, the central bank maintains a 0% nominal interest, which would encourage inflationary expectationsIn economics, adaptive expectations means that people base their expectations of what will happen in the future based on what has happened in the past. For example, if inflation has been high in the past, people would expect it to be high in the future. and lower expected real interest rates, which would stimulate spending.