scholarly journals House Prices, Credit and the Effect of Monetary Policy in Norway: Evidence from Structural VAR Models

Author(s):  
rjan Robstad
2012 ◽  
Vol 44 (29) ◽  
pp. 3841-3856 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mala Raghavan ◽  
Paramsothy Silvapulle ◽  
George Athanasopoulos

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-28
Author(s):  
Knut Are Aastveit ◽  
Francesco Furlanetto ◽  
Francesca Loria

Abstract We investigate whether the Federal Reserve has responded systematically to house and stock prices and whether this response has changed over time using a Bayesian structural VAR model with time-varying parameters and stochastic volatility. To recover the systematic component of monetary policy, we interpret the interest rate equation in the VAR as an extended monetary policy rule responding to ination, the output gap, house prices and stock prices. Our results indicate that the systematic component of monetary policy in the U.S. responded to real stock price growth significantly but episodically, mainly around recessions and periods of financial instability, and took real house price growth into account only in the years preceding the Great Recession. Around half of the estimated response captures the predictor role of asset prices for future ination and real economic activity, while the remaining component reects a direct response to stock prices and house prices.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolina Arteaga Cabrales ◽  
Joan Camilo Granados Castro ◽  
Jair Ojeda Joya

We study the effect of monetary policy shocks on commodity prices. While most of the literature has found that expansionary shocks have a positive effect on aggregate price indices, we study the effect on individual prices of a sample of four commodities. This set of commodity prices is essential to understand the dynamics of the balance of payments in Colombia. The analysis is based on structural VAR models; we identify monetary policy shocks following Kim (1999, 2003) upon quarterly data for commodity prices and their fundamentals for the period from 1980q1 to 2010q3. Our results show that commodity prices overshoot their long run equilibrium in response to a contractionary shock in the US monetary policy and, in contrast with literature, the response of the individual prices considered is stronger than what has been found in aggregate indices. Additionally, it is found that the monetary policy explains a substantial share of the fluctuations in prices.


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