The Excess Sensitivity of Long-Term Interest Rates: Evidence and Implications for Macroeconomic Models
Preprint
- 13 August 2003
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
This paper demonstrates that long-term forward interest rates in the U.S. often react considerably to surprises in macroeconomic data releases and monetary policy announcements. This behavior is inconsistent with the assumption of many macroeconomic models that the long-run properties of the economy are time-invariant and perfectly known by all economic agents. Under those conditions, the shocks we consider would have only transitory effects on short-term interest rates, and hence would not generate large responses in forward rates. Our empirical findings suggest that private agents adjust their expectations of the long-run inflation rate in response to macroeconomic and monetary policy surprises. Consistent with our hypothesis, forward rates derived from inflation-indexed Treasury debt show little sensitivity to these shocks, indicating that the response of nominal forward rates is mostly driven by inflation compensation. In addition, we find that in the U.K., where the long-run inflation target is known by the private sector, long-term forward rates have not demonstrated excess sensitivity since the Bank of England achieved independence in mid-1997. We present an alternative model in which agents' perceptions of long-run inflation are not completely anchored, which fits all of our empirical results.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Term Structure of Real Rates and Expected InflationPublished by National Bureau of Economic Research ,2007
- Market-Based Measures of Monetary Policy ExpectationsPublished by Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco ,2006
- Imperfect credibility and inflation persistenceJournal of Monetary Economics, 2003
- Dynamic Inconsistencies: Counterfactual Implications of a Class of Rational-Expectations ModelsAmerican Economic Review, 2002
- Monetary Policy and Market Interest RatesAmerican Economic Review, 2001
- On the Derivation of Monetary Policy Shocks: Should We Throw the VAR out with the Bath Water?Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, 2000
- Monetary Policy Rules and Macroeconomic Stability: Evidence and Some Theory*The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2000
- Asset Price Reactions to RPI AnnouncementsSSRN Electronic Journal, 2000
- The (Un)Importance of Forward-Looking Behavior in Price SpecificationsJournal of Money, Credit and Banking, 1997
- The effect of changes in the federal funds rate target on market interest rates in the 1970sJournal of Monetary Economics, 1989