“…Finally, we contribute to the expanding literature on the effects of unconventional policies. Not surprisingly, given the innovative features of many of these policies and the limited stretch of time over which researchers have been able to observe their effects, empirical results on their efficacy span a broad spectrum between considerable impacts (Swanson (2017), Eberly et al (2019), Sims and Wu (2019), and, on the euro area, Szczerbowicz (2015), Podlich, Schnabel and Tischer (2017), Mouabbi and Sahuc (2019), Gibson et al (2016), and Neri and Siviero (2019)), to heterogeneous impacts (Burriel and Galesi (2018) and Deutsche Bundesbank (2016)), to rather moderate impacts (Pattipeilohy et al (2013), Greenlaw et al (2018), and Belke and Gros (2019)). Despite relying on a time-series methodology which, in backing out the macroeconomic propagation of the ECB's measures, does not give too much credit to any direct expectation channel of monetary policy, we find very sizeable effects.…”