Oil price shock in the US and the euro area – evidence from the shadow rate and the term premium

The aim of this article is to investigate the consequences of oil price changes for the economy of the US and the euro area. Oil price transmission channel is assessed using Granger causalities and structural vector autoregressive (VAR) specifications (applying the Cholesky factorization and the res...

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Main Author: Pažický Martin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2021-09-01
Series:Review of Economic Perspectives
Subjects:
var
b23
e42
e52
e58
q43
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/revecp-2021-0014
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spelling doaj-92e7a690bfec49ec8fcdd45f668a69362021-10-03T07:42:48ZengSciendoReview of Economic Perspectives 1804-16632021-09-0121330934610.2478/revecp-2021-0014Oil price shock in the US and the euro area – evidence from the shadow rate and the term premiumPažický Martin0Comenius University in Bratislava, Faculty of Management, Odbojárov 10, 820 05Bratislava, Slovak RepublicThe aim of this article is to investigate the consequences of oil price changes for the economy of the US and the euro area. Oil price transmission channel is assessed using Granger causalities and structural vector autoregressive (VAR) specifications (applying the Cholesky factorization and the restrictions following the method of Blanchard and Quah). The conventional oil price transmission channel is extended by a shadow policy rate and term premium, as the importance of both indicators has been growing rapidly in recent years. The results confirm that the oil price shock is not negligible in the aftermath of the Global Financial Crisis and in the subsequent period of monetary policy normalization. The findings are confirmed by the outcomes of the Bayesian VAR specification with sign restrictions. The consequences of changes in oil prices have significantly grown since the introduction of unconventional monetary instruments. The magnitude of the response of industrial production, price level and shadow interest rate to the oil price shock is strongest in the period corresponding to the unconventional monetary policy. In many cases, however, the reaction is short-lived. The conventional instrument (policy rate) in the euro area has still not been sufficient to stabilize the economy in the recent period of monetary policy normalization in the US.https://doi.org/10.2478/revecp-2021-0014oil priceunconventional monetary policyvarshadow rateterm premiumb23e42e52e58q43
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pažický Martin
spellingShingle Pažický Martin
Oil price shock in the US and the euro area – evidence from the shadow rate and the term premium
Review of Economic Perspectives
oil price
unconventional monetary policy
var
shadow rate
term premium
b23
e42
e52
e58
q43
author_facet Pažický Martin
author_sort Pažický Martin
title Oil price shock in the US and the euro area – evidence from the shadow rate and the term premium
title_short Oil price shock in the US and the euro area – evidence from the shadow rate and the term premium
title_full Oil price shock in the US and the euro area – evidence from the shadow rate and the term premium
title_fullStr Oil price shock in the US and the euro area – evidence from the shadow rate and the term premium
title_full_unstemmed Oil price shock in the US and the euro area – evidence from the shadow rate and the term premium
title_sort oil price shock in the us and the euro area – evidence from the shadow rate and the term premium
publisher Sciendo
series Review of Economic Perspectives
issn 1804-1663
publishDate 2021-09-01
description The aim of this article is to investigate the consequences of oil price changes for the economy of the US and the euro area. Oil price transmission channel is assessed using Granger causalities and structural vector autoregressive (VAR) specifications (applying the Cholesky factorization and the restrictions following the method of Blanchard and Quah). The conventional oil price transmission channel is extended by a shadow policy rate and term premium, as the importance of both indicators has been growing rapidly in recent years. The results confirm that the oil price shock is not negligible in the aftermath of the Global Financial Crisis and in the subsequent period of monetary policy normalization. The findings are confirmed by the outcomes of the Bayesian VAR specification with sign restrictions. The consequences of changes in oil prices have significantly grown since the introduction of unconventional monetary instruments. The magnitude of the response of industrial production, price level and shadow interest rate to the oil price shock is strongest in the period corresponding to the unconventional monetary policy. In many cases, however, the reaction is short-lived. The conventional instrument (policy rate) in the euro area has still not been sufficient to stabilize the economy in the recent period of monetary policy normalization in the US.
topic oil price
unconventional monetary policy
var
shadow rate
term premium
b23
e42
e52
e58
q43
url https://doi.org/10.2478/revecp-2021-0014
work_keys_str_mv AT pazickymartin oilpriceshockintheusandtheeuroareaevidencefromtheshadowrateandthetermpremium
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