Empirical Advances in Addressing Policy Questions
Paper Session
Friday, Jan. 6, 2023 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM (CST)
- Chair: Karel Mertens, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Do Government Spending Multipliers Depend on the Sign of the Shock?
Abstract
Much recent attention has been devoted to estimating the size of government purchases multipliers, with a large focus on whether they depend on the underlying circumstances. In this paper, we consider another possible nonlinearity – asymmetry – where declines in government spending have different effects on economic activity than rises in government spending. We find no evidence of asymmetric government spending multipliers, in contrast to the findings of some recent work. We begin by considering how to estimate asymmetric effects using local projections and point out a number of subtle, but important, complications that have been overlooked by some of the previous literature. We also consider a polynomial based approach to test for non-linearities in the government spending multiplier based on the sign of the shock.Fiscal Stimulus and the Systematic Response of Monetary Policy
Abstract
Economic theory suggests that the effects of fiscal stimulus can vary substantially with the systematic response of monetary policy. Empirical estimates of the causal effects of fiscal shocks implicitly embed a particular monetary reaction: they provide treatment effects that average across in-sample monetary policy. Building on McKay and Wolf (2022), I discuss how evidence on monetary policy shocks can be used to predict the effects of fiscal stimulus under arbitrary monetary policy reaction. I review the underlying theory, propose a simple empirical strategy, and present an application.The Importance of Fed Chair Speeches as a Monetary Policy Tool
Abstract
Typical studies of the effects of monetary policy on financial markets and the macroeconomy focus on FOMC announcements as the source of monetary policy variation. In this paper, I estimate the effects and importance of speeches and Congressional testimony by the Fed Chair as a source of monetary policy variation from 1988 to 2019. I show that, for many assets, speeches by the Fed Chair are even more important than FOMC announcements, in that they account for a greater fraction of the monthly variation in those assets’ prices. Thus, the previous literature’s focus on FOMC announcements alone has been ignoring arguably the most important source of monetary policy variation in the data.JEL Classifications
- E0 - General
- C0 - General