Frequency-dependent real-time effects of uncertainty in the United States : evidence from daily data
Loading...
Date
Authors
Nyamela, Yanele
Plakandaras, Vasilios
Gupta, Rangan
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Routledge
Abstract
In this paper, we analyse the impact of uncertainty shocks at the daily-frequency on key macroeconomic variables for the United States. In doing so, we use a vector autoregressive (VAR) model, including the inflation rate, a real-time measure of economic activity and a measure of monetary policy as endogenous variables and decompose uncertainty effects into short, medium and long-term based on a discrete-time Fourier transformation. Aggregate results (prior to decomposition) show that an increase in economic uncertainty has a significant expansionary impact on monetary policy. However, when we decompose uncertainty into its short-, medium- and long-run components, we find that economic activity is affected negatively in a statistically significant manner to shocks in low-frequency uncertainty, while, statistically significant monetary expansion is observed under shocks to relatively high frequencies of uncertainty.
Description
Keywords
Uncertainty, Frequency-dependence, Daily data
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Nyamela, Y., Plakandaras, V. & Gupta, R. 2020, 'Frequency-dependent real-time effects of uncertainty in the United States: evidence from daily data', Applied Economics Letters, vol. 27, no. 19, pp. 1562-1566, doi : 10.1080/13504851.2019.1697419.