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Helge Berger

    1 janvier 1965
    Too many cooks?
    Central bank boards around the world
    Geography or skills
    What determines fiscal policy?
    Does global liquidity matter for monetary policy in the euro area?
    The information content of money in forecasting euro area inflation
    • This paper contributes to the debate on the role of money in monetary policy by analyzing the information content of money in forecasting euro-area inflation. We compare the predictive performance within and among various classes of structural and empirical models in a consistent framework using Bayesian and other estimation techniques. We find that money contains relevant information for inflation in some model classes. Money-based New Keynesian DSGE models and VARs incorporating money perform better than their cashless counterparts. But there are also indications that the contribution of money has its limits. The marginal contribution of money to forecasting accuracy is often small, money adds little to dynamic factor models, and it worsens forecasting accuracy of partial equilibrium models. Finally, non-monetary models dominate monetary models in an all-out horserace. -- Information content of money ; inflation forecasting ; New Keynesian model ; DSGE model ; P* model ; Two-pillar Phillips curve ; VAR model ; general dynamic factor model ; Bayesian estimation ; Euro area

      The information content of money in forecasting euro area inflation
    • Global excess liquidity roaming the world's financial markets (or its sudden absence) is sometimes believed to limit sovereign monetary policy even in large economies such as the euro area. However, there is still discussion about what constitutes global excess liquidity and how exactly it shapes the policy environment. Our approach adjusts liquidity for longerterm interest rate and output effects and focuses on U.S. and Japanese liquidity as relevant proxies for global developments from a euro area perspective. We find that both excess liquidity in Japan and, in particular, the U.S. tend to lead developments in euro area liquidity. U.S. excess liquidity also enters consistently positive as a determinant of euro area inflation and is shown to be Granger-causal for euro area inflation in an out-of-sample forecasting exercise. In part, this result seems to be related to a weakening of the euro area interest rate channel during times of excessive U.S. liquidity. In contrast, the influence of Japanese and euro area excess liquidity on euro area inflation is more limited. -- Global excess liquidity ; euro area ; inflation ; monetary policy ; interest rate channel ; forecasting accuracy

      Does global liquidity matter for monetary policy in the euro area?
    • In this note, we use multivariate models estimated with Bayesian techniques and an out-ofsample approach to investigate whether money growth Granger-causes output growth in the United States. We find surprisingly strong evidence for a money-output link over the 1960-2005 period. However, further analysis indicates that this result is likely to be misleading; after the "Great moderation", the Granger-causal role of money appears to have vanished completely. -- Bayesian VAR ; out-of-sample forecasting ; granger causality ; money ; output ; federal reserve ; Volcker

      Does money still matter for US output?