The low velocity of circulation of money implies that households hold more money than they normally spend. This behavior is explained if households face uncertain expenditure needs, so that they have a precautionary motive for holding money. We investigate this motive in a search model where households are subject to preference shocks. The model predicts that the velocity is not only low but also interest elastic. The model closely fits United States data on velocity and interest rates (1892-2004). The empirical analysis reveals a dramatic reduction in precautionary balances towards the end of our sample, which is important for policy issues
This study models the demand for a broad monetary aggregate (M2) from the Great Depression through t...
We present a model that simultaneously explains why uncovered interest parity holds for some pairs o...
Since World War II, permanent interest rate shocks have driven nearly all of the fluctuations of U.S...
The low velocity of circulation of money implies that households hold more money than they normally ...
The observed low velocity of circulation of money implies that households hold more money than they ...
We investigate the quantitative implications of precautionary demand for money for business cycle dy...
We investigate the quantitative implications of precautionary demand for money for business cycle dy...
We investigate quantitative implications of precautionary demand for money for business cycle dynam...
We construct a dynamic search model to examine the behavior of velocity. The prominent feature of th...
Precautionary demand for money is significant in the data, and may have important implications for b...
The paper shows that US GDP velocity of M1 money has exhibited long cycles around a 1.25% per year u...
The paper shows that US GDP velocity of money has exhibited long cycles around a 1.25% per year upwa...
In this paper we argue that the relevant decision for the majority of US households is not the fract...
In this paper it is shown that money can matter for macroeconomic stability under interest rate poli...
This article investigates consumption and money-holding behaviour within an intertemporal optimizati...
This study models the demand for a broad monetary aggregate (M2) from the Great Depression through t...
We present a model that simultaneously explains why uncovered interest parity holds for some pairs o...
Since World War II, permanent interest rate shocks have driven nearly all of the fluctuations of U.S...
The low velocity of circulation of money implies that households hold more money than they normally ...
The observed low velocity of circulation of money implies that households hold more money than they ...
We investigate the quantitative implications of precautionary demand for money for business cycle dy...
We investigate the quantitative implications of precautionary demand for money for business cycle dy...
We investigate quantitative implications of precautionary demand for money for business cycle dynam...
We construct a dynamic search model to examine the behavior of velocity. The prominent feature of th...
Precautionary demand for money is significant in the data, and may have important implications for b...
The paper shows that US GDP velocity of M1 money has exhibited long cycles around a 1.25% per year u...
The paper shows that US GDP velocity of money has exhibited long cycles around a 1.25% per year upwa...
In this paper we argue that the relevant decision for the majority of US households is not the fract...
In this paper it is shown that money can matter for macroeconomic stability under interest rate poli...
This article investigates consumption and money-holding behaviour within an intertemporal optimizati...
This study models the demand for a broad monetary aggregate (M2) from the Great Depression through t...
We present a model that simultaneously explains why uncovered interest parity holds for some pairs o...
Since World War II, permanent interest rate shocks have driven nearly all of the fluctuations of U.S...