| Working
Paper 05-4
by F. Owen Irvine and Scott Schuh
As has been widely observed, the volatility of GDP
has declined since the mid-1980s compared with prior
years. One leading explanation for this decline is
that monetary policy improved significantly in the
later period. We utilize a cross-section of 2-digit
manufacturing and trade industries to further investigate
this explanation. Since a major channel through which
monetary policy operates is variation in the federal
funds rate, we hypothesized that industries that are
more interest sensitive should have experienced larger
declines in the variance of their outputs in the post-1983
period. We estimate interest-sensitivity measures for
each industry from a variety of VAR models and then
run cross-sectional regressions explaining industry
volatility ratios as a function of their interest-sensitivity
measures. These regressions reveal little evidence
of a statistically significant relationship between
industry volatility reductions and our measures of
industry interest sensitivity. This result poses challenges
for the hypothesis that improved monetary policy explains
the decline in GDP volatility.
JEL classification codes: E22, E32, E50
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