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What does money and credit tell us about real activity in the United States?
Institution:1. Ghent University, Sint-Pietersplein 5, 9000 Gent, Belgium;2. European Central Bank, Sonnemannstrasse 20, 60314 Frankfurt am Main, Germany;3. Weiden Technical University of Applied Sciences, Hetzenrichter Weg 15, D-92637 Weiden, Germany;1. School of Business and Economics, Department of Accounting and Finance, Thompson Rivers University, 900 McGill Road, Kamloops, BC V2C 5N3, Canada;2. College of Business Administration, Department of Finance, Kent State University, P.O. Box 5190, Kent, OH 44242-0001, USA;3. School of Business and Economics, Department of Economics and Finance, Lynchburg College, 1501 Lakeside Drive, Lynchburg, VA 24551, USA;1. International Monetary Fund, Washington, United States;2. European University Institute, Florence, Italy;3. De Nederlandsche Bank, Amsterdam, The Netherlands;4. University of Groningen, The Netherlands;5. CESifo, Munich, Germany
Abstract:We analyse the forecasting power of different monetary aggregates and credit variables for US GDP. Special attention is paid to the influence of the recent financial market crisis. For that purpose, in the first step we use a three-variable single-equation framework with real GDP, an interest rate spread and a monetary or credit variable, in forecasting horizons of one to eight quarters. This first stage thus serves to pre-select the variables with the highest forecasting content. In a second step, we use the selected monetary and credit variables within different VAR models, and compare their forecasting properties against a benchmark VAR model with GDP and the term spread (and univariate AR models). Our findings suggest that narrow monetary aggregates, as well as different credit variables, comprise useful predictive information for economic dynamics beyond that contained in the term spread. However, this finding only holds true in a sample that includes the most recent financial crisis. Looking forward, an open question is whether this change in the relationship between money, credit, the term spread and economic activity has been the result of a permanent structural break or whether we might return to the previous relationships.
Keywords:Money  Credit  Forecasting
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