Traditional specifications of money demand have been commonly plagued by persistent overprediction, implausible parameter estimates, and highly autocorrelated errors. This paper argues that some of those problems stem from the failure to account for the impact of financial innovation. We estimate money demand for ten developing countries employing various proxies for the innovation process and provide an assessment of the relative importance of this variable. We find that financial innovation plays an important role in determining money demand and its fluctuations, and that the importance of this role increases with the rate of inflation
Many studies of the demand for money, covering a wide variety of economies, have demonstrated the im...
This paper tests whether financial innovations in the Philippines distorted the long-run relation be...
A stable demand for money function is a necessary condition for the supply of money to be utilized a...
Traditional specifications of money demand have been commonly plagU4:!d by persistent overprediction...
Empirically, traditional money demand equations are frequently characterized by periods of"missing m...
Conventional error-correction and cointegration techniques are utilized to derive demand for money m...
Traditional studies of money demand for both developed and less developed countries have shown that ...
This paper reexamines one estimation of money demand equations using quarterly data for Chile and Me...
In this paper, we applied alternative time series techniques and obtained similar summaries of deman...
This paper presents a general equilibrium model of money demand where the velocity of money changes ...
In recent years, a number of developing countries have undergone extensive reforms in the financial ...
A significant body of literature on developed countries support the view that disequilibrium in the ...
This paper embeds two key ideas about the nature of financial innovation taken from the empirical li...
Three panel data estimation methods are used to estimate the cointegrating equations for the demand ...
Financial innovation refers both to technological advances which facilitate access to information, ...
Many studies of the demand for money, covering a wide variety of economies, have demonstrated the im...
This paper tests whether financial innovations in the Philippines distorted the long-run relation be...
A stable demand for money function is a necessary condition for the supply of money to be utilized a...
Traditional specifications of money demand have been commonly plagU4:!d by persistent overprediction...
Empirically, traditional money demand equations are frequently characterized by periods of"missing m...
Conventional error-correction and cointegration techniques are utilized to derive demand for money m...
Traditional studies of money demand for both developed and less developed countries have shown that ...
This paper reexamines one estimation of money demand equations using quarterly data for Chile and Me...
In this paper, we applied alternative time series techniques and obtained similar summaries of deman...
This paper presents a general equilibrium model of money demand where the velocity of money changes ...
In recent years, a number of developing countries have undergone extensive reforms in the financial ...
A significant body of literature on developed countries support the view that disequilibrium in the ...
This paper embeds two key ideas about the nature of financial innovation taken from the empirical li...
Three panel data estimation methods are used to estimate the cointegrating equations for the demand ...
Financial innovation refers both to technological advances which facilitate access to information, ...
Many studies of the demand for money, covering a wide variety of economies, have demonstrated the im...
This paper tests whether financial innovations in the Philippines distorted the long-run relation be...
A stable demand for money function is a necessary condition for the supply of money to be utilized a...