Deconstruction of Monetary Surprises and the Information Effect: A Case of Australia
Field | Value | Language |
dc.contributor.author | huang, weijia | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2023-02-21T04:17:25Z | |
dc.date.available | 2023-02-21T04:17:25Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2023-02-21 | |
dc.identifier.uri | https://hdl.handle.net/2123/30074 | |
dc.description.abstract | Monetary policies surprises extracted from high-frequency data are a common instrument used to study the impact of monetary policy. It is often found that these shocks have ‘counter-intuitive’ effects, which are not explained by conventional interest rate transmission mechanisms. Following Jarocinski and Karadi (2020), I decompose high-frequency surprises in the 1-month Overnight Indexed Swap (OIS) into two distinct shocks, a central bank information shock and a classic monetary policy shock. By tracing their co-movements with high-frequency surprises in stock prices using a sign-restriction identification technique in SVAR model, I find evidence for both a central bank information shock and a ‘RBA information effect’, which functions by informing the public sector about the current state of the economy rather than tightening or loosening policy. The two effects have comparable impacts on a variety of macroeconomic variables. Controlling for the information effect somewhat mitigates the price puzzle. | en_AU |
dc.language.iso | en | en_AU |
dc.subject | Monetary Policy | en_AU |
dc.subject | Information Effect of Central Bank | en_AU |
dc.subject | High-frequency Identification | en_AU |
dc.subject | Bayesian Structural VAR | en_AU |
dc.subject | Sign-restrictions Identification | en_AU |
dc.title | Deconstruction of Monetary Surprises and the Information Effect: A Case of Australia | en_AU |
dc.type | Thesis | en_AU |
dc.type.thesis | Masters by Coursework | en_AU |
usyd.faculty | SeS faculties schools::Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences | en_AU |
usyd.department | School of Economics | en_AU |
workflow.metadata.only | No | en_AU |
Associated file/s
Associated collections