Finance and Economics Discussion Series (FEDS)
April 2019
Uncertainty shocks, monetary policy and long-term interest rates
Gianni Amisano and Oreste Tristani
Abstract:
We study the relationship between monetary policy and long-term rates in a structural, general equilibrium model estimated on both macro and yields data from the United States. Regime shifts in the conditional variance of productivity shocks, or "uncertainty shocks", are an important model ingredient. First, they account for countercyclical movements in risk premia. Second, they induce changes in the demand for precautionary saving, which affects expected future real rates. Through changes in both risk-premia and expected future real rates, uncertainty shocks account for about 1/2 of the variance of long-term nominal yields over long horizons. The remaining driver of long-term yields are changes in in ation expectations induced by conventional, autoregressive shocks. Long-term in ation expectations implied by our model are in line with those based on survey data over the 1980s and 1990s, but less dogmatically anchored in the 2000s.
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Keywords: Bayesian Estimation, Monetary Policy Rules, Regime Switches, Term Structure Of Interest Rates, Uncertainty Shocks
DOI: https://doi.org/10.17016/FEDS.2019.024
PDF: Full Paper