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Why U.S. Money does not Cause U.S. Output, but does Cause Hong Kong Output

dc.contributor.authorRodriguez, Gabriel
dc.contributor.authorRowe, Nicholas
dc.date.accessioned2020-11-04T17:07:25Z
dc.date.available2020-11-04T17:07:25Z
dc.date.issued2002
dc.description.abstractStandard econometric tests for whether money causes output will be meaningless if monetary policy is chosen optimally to smooth fluctuations in output. If U.S. monetary policy were chosen to smooth U.S. output, we show that U.S. money will not Granger cause U.S. output. Indeed, as shown by Rowe and Yetman (2000), if there is a (say) 6 quarter lag in the effect of money on output, then U.S. output will be unforecastable from any information set available to the Fed lagged 6 quarters. But if other countries, for example Hong Kong, have currencies that are fixed to the U.S. dollar, Hong Kong monetary policy will then be chosen in Washington D.C., with no concern for smoothing Hong Kong output. Econometric causality tests of U.S. money on Hong Kong output will then show evidence of causality. We test this empirically. Our empirical analysis also provides a measure of the degree to which macroeconomic stabilisation is sacrificed by adopting a fixed exchange rate rather than an independent monetary policy.
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10393/41290
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.20381/ruor-25514
dc.languageen_ca
dc.subjectMonetary Policy
dc.subjectCausality
dc.subjectVECM
dc.subjectU.S. Money
dc.subjectU.S. Federal Funds Rate
dc.titleWhy U.S. Money does not Cause U.S. Output, but does Cause Hong Kong Output
dc.typeWorking Paper
uottawa.departmentScience économique / Economics

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