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Shocking the economy from 1967 up to 2023: reinforcing the relevance of Divisia money in US monetary policy

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  • Barrette, Christophe
  • Paquet, Alain

Abstract

Using US quarterly data (1967–2023), including inflation’s post-pandemic surge and decline alongside monetary policies characterized by quantitative easing before refocusing on the 2% target, we utilize traditional and novel econometric tools to assess the stability of key macroeconomic variables’ responses to monetary shocks. Our findings confirm the relevance of a broad Divisia aggregate in understanding monetary policy transmission and highlight its empirical importance in explaining output and price dynamics across decades. Time-varying impulse response functions (IRFs) reveal consistent and puzzle-free price responses to Divisia-based monetary shocks throughout the sample, aligning with theory. Time-varying IRFs indicate that pandemic-related outliers in GDP (2020Q2) do not disrupt results. In contrast, Fed Funds rate or shadow policy interest rate shocks often yield puzzling outcomes across earlier and extended periods.

Suggested Citation

  • Barrette, Christophe & Paquet, Alain, 2025. "Shocking the economy from 1967 up to 2023: reinforcing the relevance of Divisia money in US monetary policy," Macroeconomic Dynamics, Cambridge University Press, vol. 29, pages 1-1, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:macdyn:v:29:y:2025:i::p:-_114
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