Empirical analysis of the elasticity of real money demand to macroeconomic variables in the United Kingdom with 2008 financial crisis effects. (original) (raw)

This research work has employed vector error correction and cointegration techniques in order to estimate the elasticity of real money demand to macroeconomic variables such as industrial production index, exchange rates and short-term interest rates in the United Kingdom. Also, global financial crisis was introduced as an impulse variable to capture structural breaks inherent in the series. Empirical results showed that long-run relationships existed between real money demand and industrial production index, short-term interest rates, and exchange rates in the United Kingdom. The study showed that in the long-run, real money demand had more than unity elasticity with industrial production index in both economies. Real money demand has an inelastic relationship with short-term interest rates and exchange rates. Furthermore, results indicated that it would take long time for real money demand to adjust to its long-run equilibrium. Impulse response analysis revealed that any increase in short term interest rates will have negative effects on the real money demand in the medium to long-term. Whilst real money demand in the United Kingdom tend to be more significant in forecasting the Euro zone money demand, the latter tends to be negatively statistically significant in the former real money demand model. The financial crisis witnessed globally had negative effects on real money demand in the United Kingdom.

Sign up for access to the world's latest research.

checkGet notified about relevant papers

checkSave papers to use in your research

checkJoin the discussion with peers

checkTrack your impact

Loading...

Loading Preview

Sorry, preview is currently unavailable. You can download the paper by clicking the button above.