Search Results

Showing results 1 to 5 of approximately 5.

(refine search)
SORT BY: PREVIOUS / NEXT
Keywords:monetary policy tightening 

Discussion Paper
What’s New with Corporate Leverage?

The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) started increasing rates on March 16, 2022, and after the January 31–February 1, 2023, FOMC meeting, the lower bound of the target range of the federal funds rate had reached 4.50 percent, a level last registered in November 2007. Such a rapid rates increase could pass through to higher funding costs for U.S. corporations. In this post, we examine how corporate leverage and bond market debt have evolved over the course of the current tightening cycle and compare the current experience to that during the previous three tightening cycles.
Liberty Street Economics , Paper 20230407a

Journal Article
Tightening Monetary Policy and Patterns of Consumption

An analysis examines the behavior of personal consumption expenditures during five episodes of monetary policy tightening since 1990.
The Regional Economist

Gauging the Fed’s Current Tightening Actions: A Historical Perspective

In 2022, the Fed started its current tightening cycle. How does it compare with other cycles in the past 40 years in terms of the magnitude of policy rate hikes?
On the Economy

Discussion Paper
Look Out for Outlook-at-Risk

The timely characterization of risks to the economic outlook plays an important role in both economic policy and private sector decisions. In a February 2023 Liberty Street Economics post, we introduced the concept of “Outlook-at-Risk”—that is, the downside risk to real activity and two-sided risks to inflation. Today we are launching Outlook-at-Risk as a regularly updated data product, with new readings for the conditional distributions of real GDP growth, the unemployment rate, and inflation to be published each month. In this post, we use the data on conditional distributions to ...
Liberty Street Economics , Paper 20230517

Working Paper
Monetary Tightening, Inflation Drivers and Financial Stress

The paper explores the state–dependent effects of a monetary tightening on financial stress, focusing on a novel dimension: the nature of supply versus demand inflation at the time of policy rate hikes. We use local projections to estimate the effect of high frequency identified monetary policy surprises on a variety of financial stress measures, differentiating the effects based on whether inflation is supply–driven (e.g. due to adverse supply or cost–push shocks) or demand–driven (e.g. due to positive demand factors). We find that financial stress flares up after a policy rate hike ...
Working Paper Series , Paper 2023-38

FILTER BY Content Type

FILTER BY Jel Classification

E1 1 items

E2 1 items

E3 1 items

E5 1 items

E6 1 items

G01 1 items

show more (2)

PREVIOUS / NEXT