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A half-century diversion of monetary policy? An empirical horse-race to identify the UK variable most likely to deliver the desired nominal GDP growth rate

A half-century diversion of monetary policy? An empirical horse-race to identify the UK variable most likely to deliver the desired nominal GDP growth rate
A half-century diversion of monetary policy? An empirical horse-race to identify the UK variable most likely to deliver the desired nominal GDP growth rate
The financial crisis of 2007–2008 triggered monetary policy designed to boost nominal demand, including ‘Quantitative Easing’, ‘Credit Easing’, ‘Forward Guidance’ and ‘Funding for Lending’. A key aim of these policies was to boost the quantity of bank credit to the non-financial corporate and household sectors. In the previous decades, however, policy-makers had not focused on bank credit. Indeed, over the past half century, different variables were raised to prominence in the quest to achieve desired nominal GDP outcomes. This paper conducts a long-overdue horse race between the various contenders in terms of their ability to account for observed nominal GDP growth, using a half-century of UK data since 1963. Employing the ‘General-to-Specific’ methodology, an equilibrium-correction model is estimated suggesting a long-run cointegrating relationship between disaggregated real economy credit and nominal GDP. Short-term and long-term interest rates and broad money do not appear to influence nominal GDP significantly. Vector autoregression and vector error correction modelling shows the real economy credit growth variable to be strongly exogenous to nominal GDP growth. Policy-makers are hence right to finally emphasise the role of bank credit, although they need to disaggregate it and specifically target bank credit for GDP-transactions.
Bank credit, credit channel, general-to-specific methodology, growth, monetary policy transmission, quantitative easing, quantity theory of credit
1042-4431
158-176
Ryan-Collins, Joshua
968dbde2-be32-47df-9841-19f43165fb5f
Werner, Richard
dc217378-eb19-4592-9be4-ab5f847b74a1
Castle, Jennifer
7b6145f0-4968-4a85-92ac-18810203ec12
Ryan-Collins, Joshua
968dbde2-be32-47df-9841-19f43165fb5f
Werner, Richard
dc217378-eb19-4592-9be4-ab5f847b74a1
Castle, Jennifer
7b6145f0-4968-4a85-92ac-18810203ec12

Ryan-Collins, Joshua, Werner, Richard and Castle, Jennifer (2016) A half-century diversion of monetary policy? An empirical horse-race to identify the UK variable most likely to deliver the desired nominal GDP growth rate. Journal of International Financial Markets, Institutions and Money, 43 (1), 158-176. (doi:10.1016/j.intfin.2016.03.009).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The financial crisis of 2007–2008 triggered monetary policy designed to boost nominal demand, including ‘Quantitative Easing’, ‘Credit Easing’, ‘Forward Guidance’ and ‘Funding for Lending’. A key aim of these policies was to boost the quantity of bank credit to the non-financial corporate and household sectors. In the previous decades, however, policy-makers had not focused on bank credit. Indeed, over the past half century, different variables were raised to prominence in the quest to achieve desired nominal GDP outcomes. This paper conducts a long-overdue horse race between the various contenders in terms of their ability to account for observed nominal GDP growth, using a half-century of UK data since 1963. Employing the ‘General-to-Specific’ methodology, an equilibrium-correction model is estimated suggesting a long-run cointegrating relationship between disaggregated real economy credit and nominal GDP. Short-term and long-term interest rates and broad money do not appear to influence nominal GDP significantly. Vector autoregression and vector error correction modelling shows the real economy credit growth variable to be strongly exogenous to nominal GDP growth. Policy-makers are hence right to finally emphasise the role of bank credit, although they need to disaggregate it and specifically target bank credit for GDP-transactions.

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Accepted/In Press date: 26 March 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 13 April 2016
Published date: July 2016
Keywords: Bank credit, credit channel, general-to-specific methodology, growth, monetary policy transmission, quantitative easing, quantity theory of credit
Organisations: Southampton Business School

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 394022
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/394022
ISSN: 1042-4431
PURE UUID: 248e7ad3-3196-4481-97ac-263896f3357d

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Date deposited: 10 May 2016 11:31
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 05:33

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Contributors

Author: Joshua Ryan-Collins
Author: Richard Werner
Author: Jennifer Castle

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