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WHAT DO VARS TELL US ABOUT THE IMPACT OF A CREDIT SUPPLY SHOCK?
55
Citations
34
References
2018
Year
Financial Risk ManagementEconomic FluctuationInternational Financial CrisisVector AutoregressionStructural Vector AutoregressionExternal ShockInternational FinanceRisk ManagementManagementStatisticsEconomicsCredit MarketFinanceRecent Financial CrisisMonte Carlo ExperimentFinancial EconomicsMacroeconomicsShock (Economics)BusinessEconometricsThe ImpactDo VarsFinancial Crisis
Abstract In the aftermath of the recent financial crisis, a variety of structural vector autoregression (VAR) models have been proposed to identify credit supply shocks. Using a Monte Carlo experiment, we show that the performance of these models can vary substantially, with some identification schemes producing particularly misleading results. When applied to U.S. data, the estimates from the best performing VAR models indicate, on average, that credit supply shocks that raise spreads by 10 basis points reduce GDP growth and inflation by 1% after one year. These shocks were important during the Great Recession, accounting for about half the decline in GDP growth.
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