Hailed by investors as a weapon to fight off recession but slammed by critics for fuelling inequality, quantitative easing looks set for a comeback in Britain as the Bank of England tries to shield the economy from the fallout of Brexit.
Quantitative Easing (QE) program by the eurozone is unlikely to impact directly on China through financial markets, but it may affect China's monetary policy-making and have an indirect negative impact on China's real economy in turn, experts have said.
China is unlikely to feel any major impact once the U.S. Federal Reserve shuts off the money faucet known as the quantitative easing, and Fed's easy-does-it approach will ensure that China does not feel the sting.
China's export dependence on Japan has declined sharply, and Japan's QE will affect the United States more than China, senior economics researchers said in an interview on the weakening yen's impact on China.