Money, policy regimes and economic fluctuations.

Part I deals with the estimation of money demand functions. Several non-structural interpretations of the conventionally estimated functions are surveyed and discussed (Chapter 1). An application to Italian data is then presented, focusing on two such interpretations. First (Chapter 2), the role of...

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Main Author: Bagliano, Fabio-Cesare
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/1437/
http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/1437/1/U091557.pdf
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spelling ftlschooleconom:oai:etheses.lse.ac.uk:1437 2023-05-15T17:08:56+02:00 Money, policy regimes and economic fluctuations. Bagliano, Fabio-Cesare 1996 application/pdf http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/1437/ http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/1437/1/U091557.pdf en eng http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/1437/1/U091557.pdf Bagliano, Fabio-Cesare (1996) Money, policy regimes and economic fluctuations. PhD thesis, London School of Economics and Political Science. Thesis NonPeerReviewed 1996 ftlschooleconom 2022-03-16T19:59:26Z Part I deals with the estimation of money demand functions. Several non-structural interpretations of the conventionally estimated functions are surveyed and discussed (Chapter 1). An application to Italian data is then presented, focusing on two such interpretations. First (Chapter 2), the role of expectations in determining money demand behaviour is assessed. Since monetary policy regimes have a direct effect on the time-series properties of interest rates, the identification of clear regime changes may provide a powerful test of forward-looking models of money demand. An expectations model is constructed, which is stable in the face of the Italian monetary policy regime change in 1970, when traditional backward-looking money demand functions show remarkable instability. Second (Chapter 3), the existence of multiple long-run relations among the variables relevant to money demand is shown to create problems for the interpretation of single-equation estimates. To obtain a satisfactory specification of the long-run relations and the short-run dynamics of the system around equilibrium, a sequential procedure is devised and applied. In Part II, the controversy between "real" and "monetary" theories of fluctuations is examined (Chapter 4). A "monetary" equilibrium model of the cycle is constructed, extending the original Lucas "island" framework to allow for a powerful role for stabilization policy. The implications of alternative monetary policy regimes are derived and tested on U.S. data, comparing two periods (1922-1940 and 1952-1968) with a different policy stance. Chapter 5 investigates the relative importance of the "money" and "credit" channels of monetary transmission for Italy in the 1982-1994 period, using a structural VAR methodology. Monetary policy is effective, though not through a "credit channel", and independent disturbances to credit supply have sizeable real effects. In Chapter 6 the focus is shifted to anticipated fiscal policy actions and their effect on consumption. A long series of pre-announced income tax changes is examined for the U.K. Consumption reacts to such fiscally-induced disposable income changes only at the implementation dates. Thesis Lucas Island The London School of Economics and Political Science: LSE Theses Online Lucas Island ENVELOPE(77.955,77.955,-68.504,-68.504)
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description Part I deals with the estimation of money demand functions. Several non-structural interpretations of the conventionally estimated functions are surveyed and discussed (Chapter 1). An application to Italian data is then presented, focusing on two such interpretations. First (Chapter 2), the role of expectations in determining money demand behaviour is assessed. Since monetary policy regimes have a direct effect on the time-series properties of interest rates, the identification of clear regime changes may provide a powerful test of forward-looking models of money demand. An expectations model is constructed, which is stable in the face of the Italian monetary policy regime change in 1970, when traditional backward-looking money demand functions show remarkable instability. Second (Chapter 3), the existence of multiple long-run relations among the variables relevant to money demand is shown to create problems for the interpretation of single-equation estimates. To obtain a satisfactory specification of the long-run relations and the short-run dynamics of the system around equilibrium, a sequential procedure is devised and applied. In Part II, the controversy between "real" and "monetary" theories of fluctuations is examined (Chapter 4). A "monetary" equilibrium model of the cycle is constructed, extending the original Lucas "island" framework to allow for a powerful role for stabilization policy. The implications of alternative monetary policy regimes are derived and tested on U.S. data, comparing two periods (1922-1940 and 1952-1968) with a different policy stance. Chapter 5 investigates the relative importance of the "money" and "credit" channels of monetary transmission for Italy in the 1982-1994 period, using a structural VAR methodology. Monetary policy is effective, though not through a "credit channel", and independent disturbances to credit supply have sizeable real effects. In Chapter 6 the focus is shifted to anticipated fiscal policy actions and their effect on consumption. A long series of pre-announced income tax changes is examined for the U.K. Consumption reacts to such fiscally-induced disposable income changes only at the implementation dates.
format Thesis
author Bagliano, Fabio-Cesare
spellingShingle Bagliano, Fabio-Cesare
Money, policy regimes and economic fluctuations.
author_facet Bagliano, Fabio-Cesare
author_sort Bagliano, Fabio-Cesare
title Money, policy regimes and economic fluctuations.
title_short Money, policy regimes and economic fluctuations.
title_full Money, policy regimes and economic fluctuations.
title_fullStr Money, policy regimes and economic fluctuations.
title_full_unstemmed Money, policy regimes and economic fluctuations.
title_sort money, policy regimes and economic fluctuations.
publishDate 1996
url http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/1437/
http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/1437/1/U091557.pdf
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op_relation http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/1437/1/U091557.pdf
Bagliano, Fabio-Cesare (1996) Money, policy regimes and economic fluctuations. PhD thesis, London School of Economics and Political Science.
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