Working Paper Series no. 616: The Inverted Leading Indicator Property and Redistribution Effect of the Interest Rate.

Abstract:

The interest rate at which US firms borrow funds has two features: (i) it moves in a countercyclical fashion and (ii) it is an inverted leading indicator of real economic activity: low interest rates today forecast future booms in GDP, consumption, investment, and employment. We show that a Kiyotaki-Moore model accounts for both properties when interest-rate movements are driven, in a significant way, by self-fulfilling shocks that redistribute income away from lenders and to borrowers during booms. The credit-based nature of such self-fulfilling equilibria is shown to be essential: the dynamic correlation between current loanable funds rate and future aggregate economic activity depends critically on the property that the interest rate is state-contingent. Bayesian estimation of our benchmark DSGE model on US data shows that the model driven by redistribution shocks results in a better fit to the data than both standard RBC models and Kiyotaki-Moore type models with unique equilibrium..

Patrick A. Pintus, Yi Wen and Xiaochuan Xing
December 2016

JEL codes: E21, E22, E32, E44, E63.

Keywords: Endogenous Collateral Constraints, State-Contingent Loan Repayment, Redistribution Shocks, Multiple Equilibria.

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Working Paper Series no. 616: The Inverted Leading Indicator Property and Redistribution Effect of the Interest Rate.
  • Published on 12/30/2016
  • 56 pages
  • EN
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Updated on: 03/30/2018 09:31