Asymmetric effects of policy uncertainty on the demand for money in the United States

By Mohsen Bahmani-Oskooee, Majid Maki Nayeri in Research

Abstract

A comprehensive measure of economic uncertainty, known as “Policy Uncertainty”, which was constructed by the Economic Policy Uncertainty Group by searching popular newspapers for uncertain terms associated with economic factors and its impact on macro variables, is gaining momentum. Although some researchers have assessed its impact on the demand for money in a few countries, we considered the USA demand for money one more time and showed that when a linear money demand was estimated, policy uncertainty had no long-run effects. However, when a nonlinear model was estimated, the results showed that while increased policy uncertainty induces the public to hold less money in the long run, decreased uncertainty has no long-run effects, a clear sign of asymmetric response. View Full-Text

Posted on:
November 25, 2021
Length:
1 minute read, 122 words
Categories:
Research
Tags:
Macroeconomics Uncertainty Money demand Asymmetry
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
Policy Uncertainty and the Demand for Money in Japan