|
First Quarter 1994
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
| Economic Review
is no longer published in hard copy.
It has been replaced by the all-electronic
Economic and Financial Policy Review.
Subscribe now and read the latest issue
by visiting www.dallasfedreview.org. |
|
The Federal
Funds Rate as an Indicator of Monetary Policy: Evidence
from the 1980s
Nathan S. Balke and Kenneth
M. Emery
Recently, several economists have
argued that movements in the federal funds rate are
a good proxy for changes in monetary policy. In this
article, Nathan Balke and Kenneth Emery critically examine
this view and the evidence supporting it. Using simple
vector autoregressions, they find that before 1980 the
correlations between the federal funds rate and other
important macroeconomic variables are consistent with
a traditional monetary policy interpretation of the
federal funds rate. However, they show that after 1982
the relationships between the federal funds rate and
other macroeconomic variables change significantly.
Most important, the correlations between the federal
funds rate and other macroeconomic variables observed
during the 1980s are not as consistent with a traditional
monetary policy view of the federal funds rate as they
were before 1980.
Balke and Emery's work highlights
how relationships between important macroeconomic variables
can change when institutions or policy regimes change.
While the federal funds rate may still be a good indicator
of monetary policy, its relationship with other important
macroeconomic variables is now clearly different from
what it was before 1980.
Demographics
and the Long-Term Outlook for Housing Investment
John K. Hill and D'Ann M.
Petersen
John Hill and D'Ann Petersen measure
the importance of projected shifts in the size and age
distribution of the U.S. population for domestic housing
investment. Their analysis runs through the year 2010
and provides separate estimates for single-family and
multifamily investment.
Hill and Petersen find that the
contractionary effects of the population slowdown are
already being felt in the housing industry and probably
have been since the latter part of the 1980s. In Hill
and Petersen's simulations, demographic shifts lower
net housing investment by 17 percent from the late 1980s
through the first half of the 1990s. Population factors
then reduce net investment an additional 22 percent
through the year 2005 before turning favorable.
Hill and Petersen discuss the
implications of their findings for construction jobs
and housing prices. They suggest that the population
slowdown need not produce an absolute contraction in
housing employment. It will, however, reduce housing's
share of national employment by as much as one-third.
According to the authors, the changing demographics
do not provide a compelling reason for average home
prices to suffer a deep decline. They do suggest, however,
that significant relative price adjustments may need
to take place between different types of homes.
A Primer on
the Nature of Business Cycles
Gregory W. Huffman
Discussions of the effects of
monetary and fiscal policy sometimes center on the impact
of such policies in ameliorating fluctuations associated
with the business cycle. However, though familiar with
the term "business cycle," many people are
not aware of what it refers to exactly. In this article,
Gregory Huffman presents an explanation of the term
and provides a detailed illustration of post-World War
II U.S. business cycles. He also contrasts the behavior
of various U.S. economic time series over the business
cycle with similar Canadian statistics and points out
some apparent anomalies in the data.
|