Search results for "jel:E43"

showing 7 items of 7 documents

Nonlinear dynamics of interest rate and inflation

2004

According to several empirical studies, US inflation and nominal interest rates, as well as the real interest rate, can be described as unit root processes. These results imply that nominal interest rates and expected inflation do not move one-for-one in the long run, which is not consistent with the theoretical models. In this paper we introduce a nonlinear bivariate mixture autoregressive model that seems to fit quarterly US data (1952 Q1 – 2000 Q2) reasonably well. It is found that the three-month treasury bill rate and inflation share a common nonlinear component that explains a large part of their persistence. The real interest rate is devoid of this component, indicating one-for-one m…

Economics and Econometricsmedia_common.quotation_subjectFisher equationjel:E43International Fisher effectjel:C32nonlinear models interest rate inflation cointegration analysisInterest rateNominal interest rateContinuously compounded nominal and real returnsEconomicsEconometricsFisher hypothesisReal interest rateSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)Rendleman–Bartter modelnonlinear models; interest rate; inflation; cointegration analysismedia_common
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Structural reforms in a debt overhang

2014

We assess the effects of reforms in product and labor markets in a model economy featuring credit restrictions and pre-existing long-term debt. Both elements, which are core features of the current scenario faced by some euro area countries, combine to produce a slow and protracted deleveraging of the private sector and a persistent recession following a negative financial shock. In this environment, we show that product and labor market reforms may stimulate output and employment even in the short run, despite their defl ationary effects. Furthermore, by favoring a faster recovery of investment and collateral values, product market reforms bring forward the end of deleveraging and the exit…

MacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsProduct marketCollateralmedia_common.quotation_subjecteducationjel:E43jel:E65jel:E44Monetary economicsRecessionjel:G21deleveraging collateral constraints long-run debt structural reformsDebt0502 economics and businessEconomics050207 economicshealth care economics and organizations050205 econometrics media_commonShort run05 social sciencesInvestment (macroeconomics)Debt overhangShock (economics)DeleveragingFinanceJournal of Monetary Economics
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ANALYZING THE EUROPEAN MARKET OF INTEREST RATE SWAP INDICES

2012

The interest rate risk is the most important risk that derives from the OTC transactions, taking into consideration both the notional amounts and the market value of the financial derivatives that relies on interest rate contracts. Open positions on interest rate derivatives represents more than 75% of the OTC market. In the European banking market interest rate swaps prices are strongly dependent on the interbank interest rates. In this paper we want to analyze the behavior of the Eoniaswap indices and their impact on the interest rate swaps between banks.

jel:E50lcsh:Financelcsh:HG1-9999jel:E43lcsh:Businesslcsh:HF5001-6182jel:G10jel:G21interest rate risk Eoniaswap volatility impulse response functionsThe Journal of the Faculty of Economics - Economic
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Interest rate co-movements, global factors and the long end of the term spread

2012

The disconnect between rising short and low long interest rates has been a distinctive feature of the 2000s. Both research and policy circles have argued that international forces, such as global monetary policy (e.g. Rogoff, 2006); international business cycles (e.g. Borio and Filardo, 2007); or a global savings glut (e.g Bernanke, 2005) may be responsible. In this paper, we employ recent advances in panel data econometrics to document the disconnect and link it explicitly to the existence of a global latent factor that dominates the long end of the term spread for the recent period; the saving glut story emerges as the most likely contender for the global factor.

InflationEconomics and Econometricsmedia_common.quotation_subjectYield (finance)jel:E43Short interest rates Long interest rateInternational economicsjel:C33Short and Long Interest Rates Financial Globalization Panel Data Factor Modelsjel:F36Factor modelsHGjel:F01Term (time)Interest ratejel:G15EconomicsEmerging marketsFinanceFinancial globalizationPanel dataPanel dataFactor analysismedia_commonFinancial globalizationJournal of Banking & Finance
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Some preliminary but troubling evidence on group credits in microfinance programmes

2010

Group lending programs are said to be the key factor of success of microÂ…nance. They are said to reduce information asymmetries in credit contracts and to increase repayment rates. Despite that, in recent years more and more individual credits without collateral are given, even if there is no mutual monitoring of the borrowers. We use basic descriptive statistics on individual- and group panel data, which we construct out of a World Bank data set. We provide Â…rst evidence that individuals that are not participating in group credits accumulate wealth more quickly than participants of group credit programs.

jel:E43jel:D44jel:E52jel:E58ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS
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The Intraday Interest Rate: What's that?

2015

We study the intraday interest rate in a CCP-based GC pooling repo market and its key determinants. Since collateral used in this market is identical to collateral eligible for the daylight overdraft facility of the Eurosystem, any intraday rate in this market cannot be a result of collateral constraints keeping banks from using the overdraft for arbitrage. Nevertheless, we find that in the crisis period a statistically and economically significant intraday spread (up to 60 basis points) prevailed that was only somewhat mitigated by the ECB's unconventional monetary policy measures. Our results show that this spread was mainly determined by the market liquidity of the repo market, suggestin…

Overdraftjel:E50intraday interest ratecentral counterpartyovernight reposcentral bank interventionfinancial crisisCollateralmedia_common.quotation_subjectMonetary policyjel:E43Financial systemjel:G01jel:G10jel:G21Liquidity premiumInterest rateMarket liquidityFinancial crisisArbitrageBusinessmedia_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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To switch or not to switch - Can individual lending do better in microfinance than group lending?

2011

These days it has been witnessed, that banks other individual loans instead of group loans and develop products based on individual liability in developing coun- tries. In order to study this surprising turn, we expand the conventional approach on decision making of individuals. A social prestige function is introduced that re- ‡ects the non-monetary impacts of group membership on the individual and on her decisions. If a borrower possesses more than a critical level of wealth, it is optimal for her to switch to individual borrowing. From a welfare perspective, a mixture of individual and group loans is desirable. However, the average borrower switches from group to individual lending too …

jel:E43jel:D44jel:E52jel:E58
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