@jpar1971 Creo que preguntabas hace un tiempo por los estímulos a nivel global. Por casualidad me encontré con esta recopilación a 23 de Junio, que copio y pego a continuación:
Government Stimulus pledges
· $304bn - China Ministry of Finance has issued Rmb550bn (US$77bn) of special purpose debt.
+ another Rmb1,600bn (US$226bn) is available for issue before the year end. Much of this will be for housing and connecting infrastructure
· $140bn - China PBOC buying CNY1tn of bank loans issued by local lenders to small firms this week in an effort to ease the flow of credit.
· $56bn - The PBOC also announced a Rmb400bn ($56bn) purchase loan program to boost available credit by supporting bank loans to small businesses.
· $1.55tn – China - Bloomberg estimates a ‘fiscal impulse of more than 11% of nominal GDP’ which was estimated at US$14.14tn
· We have previously assumed China at $909m comprised $344bn of China stimulus +
$565bn in special bonds for infrastructure by local authorities
· $2tn - US fiscal package approved by Congress. US may add $0.6t state aid for mortgage markets and travel industries
o The House passed a $484bn aid package to rescue small small businesses, hospitals ($75bn) and coronavirus testing ($25bn).
o $2tn US – Trump looking at $2tn infrastructure fund
o $700bn – US + Fed rate cut to 0-0.25% last night. The $700bn QE to buy Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities.
o US Fed may soon start buying in up to $750 billion of corporate debt and ETFs
o US Fed has flooded all markets with dollar liquidity through repo and swap lines.
· US$1.02tn - Japan - BoJ injecting US$1.02tn into the economy through a variety of programmes. (will check if this is in addition to the Y117tn stimulus announced)
o US$1.1tn - 117tn-yen stimulus, funded partly by a second extra budget, will be on top of another 117tn package already rolled out takes total spending in Japan at 234tn yen ($2.18tr) - 40% of Japans GDP. Japan to issue Y31.9tn in government bonds.
· $825bn (€750bn) EU - European Commission aid package yesterday aimed at supporting EU nations hit by the pandemic.
· This is an expansion on the previous $543bn (€500bn ) EU Crisis Recovery fund backed France and Germany + $963bn (€750bn) ECB scraps limits on sovereign bond purchases. ECB PEPP buying running at around €250bn
· EU Finance Ministers have so far failed to agree on a strategy to mitigate the economic impact of the pandemic.
o The pandemic emergency purchase programme (PEPP) and asset purchase programme (APP) have been reiterated with a cap of €750bn and €120bn, respectively.
o The bank is reported to have used €100bn of the PEPP so far.
· $825bn (€756bn) Germany – Bundestag approved €156bn in extra borrowing and
~€600bn in emergency funds
· $298bn Japan parliament passed ¥31.9tn ($298bn) second extra budget today to help struggling economy.
· ¥117tn stimulus programme + ¥10tn as a coronavirus reserve fund
· $934bn (£745bn) – UK Bank of England injects another £100bn ($125bn)
· $387bn (€304bn) France, $200bn (€200bn) Spain, $214bn (A$320bn) Australia - RBA ready to buy bonds again.
· US$260bn - India representing 10% of GDP.
· $62bn - South Korea – The government unveiled a 76tn won ($62bn) “New Deal” aimed at supporting the economy amid the pandemic focused on creating jobs and new industries through 2025. South Korea - New Deal will create jobs and foster new industries like 5G.
· $13.3bn - Saudi Arabia central bank will inject 50bn riyals ($13.3bn) into the banking system on top of US$43.7bn already pledged
· $78bn (C$107bn) Canada, $32bn, Singapore, $22.6bn India, $19.3bn HK, $13.7bn South Korea, $10bn Switzerland, $8.4bn Italy, $7bn NZ, $3.5bn Ireland, $2bn Taiwan, Philippines further $26bn proposed, Indonesia - adding $43bn, Thailand creating a corporate bond fund.
· South African buys ZAR10.2bn (US$119m) government bonds in May. Argentina to default on $10bn of dollar debt issued till the end of the year.
· $1,000bn - IMF available + $12bn World Bank,
>15.9tn - Total stimulus reported.
Figures may include some political double counting and some funds may not be spent depending on speed of economic recovery.