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Canonical macroeconomic and financial models require credit to be equal to its fundamental component, i.e., the net present value of the net flows to creditors. Per this conventional view, credit booms are expected to precede increased flows to creditors. However, data suggests otherwise. To...
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The Federal Reserve's objective, namely the dovish stance, is often blamed for the Great Inflation. A popular proxy for the former is constructed based on the inflation coefficients in estimated Taylor rules. However, for a welfare-optimizing central bank, the estimated Taylor coefficients are...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012843608
Monetary policy shocks affect interest rates at long horizons (10 years or more). Furthermore, the private sector's real GDP forecasts are revised upward in response to a monetary tightening. These facts challenge the prevailing theories in academic and policy circles. In this paper, I propose a...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012890145
What drives macroeconomic tail risk? To answer this question, we borrow a definition of macroeconomic risk from Adrian et al. (2019) by studying (left-tail) percentiles of the forecast distribution of GDP growth. We use local projections (Jordà , 2005) to assess how this measure of risk moves...
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Conventional wisdom regards a reduced aggregate noise as welfare improving. This study demonstrates that increased transparency regarding the unobserved state of the economy may reduce social welfare owing to the presence of nominal rigidity. On the one hand, costly business cycle fluctuations...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013291362
Excess sensitivity—the significant effects of monetary policy on long-term interest rates—is a well-known puzzle. This paper documents excess sensitivity as being more pronounced in response to monetary policy easing than monetary tightening—the asymmetric excess-sensitivity puzzle. A...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013292061
What drives macroeconomic tail risk? To answer this question, we borrow a definition of macroeconomic risk from Adrian et al. (2019) by studying (left-tail) percentiles of the forecast distribution of GDP growth. We use local projections (Jordà , 2005) to assess how this measure of risk moves...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012018464