Abstract

With the COVID-19 pandemic, the intense debate about secular stagnation will become even more important. Empirical estimates of equilibrium real interest rates are so far mostly limited to advanced economies, since no statistical procedure suitable for a large set of countries is available. This is surprising, as equilibrium rates have strong policy implications in emerging markets and developing economies as well; current estimates of the global equilibrium rate rely on only a few countries; and estimates for a more diverse set of countries can improve understanding of the drivers. This paper proposes a model and estimation strategy that decompose ex ante real interest rates into a permanent and transitory component even with short samples and high volatility. This is done with an unobserved component local level stochastic volatility model, which is used to estimate equilibrium rates for 50 countries with Bayesian methods. Equilibrium rates were lower in emerging markets and developing economies than in advanced economies in the 1980s, similar in the 1990s, and have been higher since 2000. In line with economic integration and rising global capital markets, synchronization has been rising over time and is higher among advanced economies. Equilibrium rates of countries with stronger trade linkages and similar demographic and economic trends are more synchronized.

Highlights

  • This paper proposes a statistical procedure to estimate equilibrium interest rates for a large set of countries, compares equilibrium rates between advanced economies and emerging markets and developing economies (EMDEs), and explains their synchronization over time

  • Interest rate volatility varies both in advanced economies and EMDEs

  • We propose a methodology suitable to estimate equilibrium interest rates for a large set of countries, including those with only annual data and large fluctuations of real interest rates, and provide estimates for 50 countries

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Summary

Introduction

This paper proposes a statistical procedure to estimate equilibrium interest rates for a large set of countries, compares equilibrium rates between advanced economies and EMDEs, and explains their synchronization over time. Equilibrium (natural) real interest rates and their implications for economic policy have attracted strong academic and policy interest in recent years. The sustained extraordinarily low interest rates in advanced economies suggested that the equilibrium rate of interest had declined. There has been a lot of focus on the decline in equilibrium interest rates in the United States, which is confirmed across varying equilibrium definitions and estimation strategies (Hamilton et al 2016, Kiley 2015, Lubik and Matthes 2015, Johannsen and Mertens 2016, Juselius et al 2016, Laubach and Williams 2016). The policy implications of lower equilibrium interest rates are immense. It limits the role of interest rates as a monetary policy tool to stabilize business cycles. Low rates fuel riskier investments as a result of search-for-yield behavior with implications for macro- and micro-prudential policies. Permanently lower private demand as well as higher precautionary savings and higher risk premia on safe assets may lower rates even further (Goy and van den End 2020)

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