Publication | Closed Access
The Demand for M1 in the U.S.A., 1960-1988
323
Citations
0
References
1992
Year
Applied EconomicsEconomic InquiryDynamic Error-correction FormEconomic FluctuationTime Series EconometricsEconomic MeasureMonetary PolicyEconomic ForecastingMonetary TheoryEconomic AnalysisMoney Demand FunctionStatisticsEconomic Impact AnalysisPublic PolicyEconomicsFinanceMacro FinanceGreat Velocity DeclineEconomic PolicyMacroeconomicsBusinessEconometrics
Estimated U.S. M1 demand functions appear unstable, regularly “breaking down,” over 1960–1988 (e.g. missing money, great velocity decline, M1-explosion). We propose a money demand function whose arguments include inflation, real income, long-term bond yield and risk, T-bill interest rates, and learning curve weighted yields on newly introduced instruments in M1 and non-transactions M2. The model is estimated in dynamic error-correction form; it is constant and, with an equation standard error of 0–4%, variance-dominates most previous models. Estimating alternative specifications explains earlier “breakdowns,” showing the model's distinctive features to be important in accounting for the data.