Policy Uncertainty and the Demand for Money in Japan

By Mohsen Bahmani-Oskooee, Majid Maki Nayeri in Research

Abstract

In an attempt to establish stability of the demand for money, some recent studies have included the volatility of the money supply and output to account for uncertainty. In this paper we consider the experience of Japan but rather than including an uncertainty measure related to money supply and output, we include a relatively more comprehensive measure known as Economic Policy Uncertainty. When we included this later measure, we were unable to find a stable money demand in Japan. However, when we introduced the nonlinear adjustment of policy uncertainty, we not only found a stable money demand but also meaningful estimates. Since the approach allows us to assess asymmetries, we found that in Japan the public hold more cash when there is an increase or a decrease in uncertainty.

Posted on:
November 28, 2021
Length:
1 minute read, 130 words
Categories:
Research
Tags:
Macroeconomics Uncertainty Money demand Nonlinearity
See Also:
Policy uncertainty and the demand for money in the United Kingdom: Are the effects asymmetric?
Policy uncertainty and consumption in G7 countries: An asymmetry analysis
Asymmetric effects of policy uncertainty on domestic investment in G7 countries