US monetary policy is investigated using a regime-switching no-arbitrage term structure model that relies on inflation, output, and the short interest rate as factors. The model is complemented with a set of assumptions that allow the dynamics of the private sector to be separated from monetary policy. The monetary policy regimes cannot be estimated if the yield curve is ignored during estimation. Counterfactual analysis evaluates importance of regimes in policy and shocks for the great moderation. The low-volatility regime of exogenous shocks plays an important role. Monetary policy contributes by trading off asymmetric responses of output and inflation under different regimes
This paper develops and estimates a macro-finance model that combines a canonical affine no-arbitrag...
We study how well a New Keynesian business cycle model can explain the observed behavior of nominal ...
Abstract The term structure of interest rates is a rich source of economic information and thus can ...
US monetary policy is investigated using a regime-switching no-arbitrage term structure model that r...
We estimate the effect of shifts in monetary policy using the term structure of interest rates. In o...
This dissertation aims to contribute to our understanding of the dynamics of interest rates, monetar...
UnrestrictedThere are two separate literatures studying the bidirectional relationship between monet...
Term structure models and many descriptions of the transmission of monetary policy rest on the empir...
We jointly estimate a New Keynesian Policy Model with a Gaussian affine no-arbitrage specification o...
In this paper I propose a regime-switching approach to explain why the U.S. nominal yield curve on a...
This paper estimates a standard version of the New Keynesian Monetary (NKM) model augmented with ter...
We examine the term structure of interest rates for the United States, Germany, and Japan over the p...
Abstract: To date the cointegrating properties and the regime-switching behavior of the term structu...
This paper investigates the contribution of monetary policy to the changes in output growth and infl...
This paper applies regime switching methods to the problem of measuring monetary policy. Policy pref...
This paper develops and estimates a macro-finance model that combines a canonical affine no-arbitrag...
We study how well a New Keynesian business cycle model can explain the observed behavior of nominal ...
Abstract The term structure of interest rates is a rich source of economic information and thus can ...
US monetary policy is investigated using a regime-switching no-arbitrage term structure model that r...
We estimate the effect of shifts in monetary policy using the term structure of interest rates. In o...
This dissertation aims to contribute to our understanding of the dynamics of interest rates, monetar...
UnrestrictedThere are two separate literatures studying the bidirectional relationship between monet...
Term structure models and many descriptions of the transmission of monetary policy rest on the empir...
We jointly estimate a New Keynesian Policy Model with a Gaussian affine no-arbitrage specification o...
In this paper I propose a regime-switching approach to explain why the U.S. nominal yield curve on a...
This paper estimates a standard version of the New Keynesian Monetary (NKM) model augmented with ter...
We examine the term structure of interest rates for the United States, Germany, and Japan over the p...
Abstract: To date the cointegrating properties and the regime-switching behavior of the term structu...
This paper investigates the contribution of monetary policy to the changes in output growth and infl...
This paper applies regime switching methods to the problem of measuring monetary policy. Policy pref...
This paper develops and estimates a macro-finance model that combines a canonical affine no-arbitrag...
We study how well a New Keynesian business cycle model can explain the observed behavior of nominal ...
Abstract The term structure of interest rates is a rich source of economic information and thus can ...