Negative Interest Rate & the Level of Household Debt : A Vector Autoregressive approach in a European perspective.

Ever since the big recession of the world economy 2007, the central banks in Europe have struggled to regain financial stability. Their goals have been hard to reach and 2014 The European Central bank (ECB) introduced negative interest rates for the first time in the world history. However, today, y...

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Main Author: Netzén Örn, Marcel
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Umeå universitet, Nationalekonomi 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-132005
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-umu-1320052017-03-02T05:18:39ZNegative Interest Rate & the Level of Household Debt : A Vector Autoregressive approach in a European perspective.engNetzén Örn, MarcelUmeå universitet, Nationalekonomi2017Level of household debtinterest ratenegative interest ratetransmission mechanism.Ever since the big recession of the world economy 2007, the central banks in Europe have struggled to regain financial stability. Their goals have been hard to reach and 2014 The European Central bank (ECB) introduced negative interest rates for the first time in the world history. However, today, year 2016, many countries still have not been able to reach their inflation target. During this time with expansive monetary policies, many European Union (EU) members have faced rising level of household debts to GDP. This study focus on EU-members and uses a Vector Autoregressive method, Granger causality test and an impulse-response test to give a greater understanding about the association between the level of household debt and interest rate. Further, it aims to investigate if the negative interest rate has an impact on that association. However, our empirical results show that there is a significant negative association between the level of household debt and the interest rate in Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Finland, Germany, Italy, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Spain and Sweden. Further, they show that there is a granger causality from the interest rate to the level of household debt for Belgium, Finland, Germany, Poland, Slovakia and Sweden. For all these countries, our findings show that a shock in the interest rate have a short-term effect on the level of household debt. Lastly, we found no statistical significant evidence for that the negative association between the interest rate and the level of household debt does increase when the interest rate is negative. Student thesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-132005application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Level of household debt
interest rate
negative interest rate
transmission mechanism.
spellingShingle Level of household debt
interest rate
negative interest rate
transmission mechanism.
Netzén Örn, Marcel
Negative Interest Rate & the Level of Household Debt : A Vector Autoregressive approach in a European perspective.
description Ever since the big recession of the world economy 2007, the central banks in Europe have struggled to regain financial stability. Their goals have been hard to reach and 2014 The European Central bank (ECB) introduced negative interest rates for the first time in the world history. However, today, year 2016, many countries still have not been able to reach their inflation target. During this time with expansive monetary policies, many European Union (EU) members have faced rising level of household debts to GDP. This study focus on EU-members and uses a Vector Autoregressive method, Granger causality test and an impulse-response test to give a greater understanding about the association between the level of household debt and interest rate. Further, it aims to investigate if the negative interest rate has an impact on that association. However, our empirical results show that there is a significant negative association between the level of household debt and the interest rate in Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Finland, Germany, Italy, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Spain and Sweden. Further, they show that there is a granger causality from the interest rate to the level of household debt for Belgium, Finland, Germany, Poland, Slovakia and Sweden. For all these countries, our findings show that a shock in the interest rate have a short-term effect on the level of household debt. Lastly, we found no statistical significant evidence for that the negative association between the interest rate and the level of household debt does increase when the interest rate is negative.
author Netzén Örn, Marcel
author_facet Netzén Örn, Marcel
author_sort Netzén Örn, Marcel
title Negative Interest Rate & the Level of Household Debt : A Vector Autoregressive approach in a European perspective.
title_short Negative Interest Rate & the Level of Household Debt : A Vector Autoregressive approach in a European perspective.
title_full Negative Interest Rate & the Level of Household Debt : A Vector Autoregressive approach in a European perspective.
title_fullStr Negative Interest Rate & the Level of Household Debt : A Vector Autoregressive approach in a European perspective.
title_full_unstemmed Negative Interest Rate & the Level of Household Debt : A Vector Autoregressive approach in a European perspective.
title_sort negative interest rate & the level of household debt : a vector autoregressive approach in a european perspective.
publisher Umeå universitet, Nationalekonomi
publishDate 2017
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-132005
work_keys_str_mv AT netzenornmarcel negativeinterestrateampthelevelofhouseholddebtavectorautoregressiveapproachinaeuropeanperspective
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