Abstract

This research empirically investigated the effectiveness of the interest rate policy of the Federal Reserve (Fed) on managing the subprime mortgage crisis. The study employed the autoregressive distributed lag model (ARDL) to analyze the stability of the Fed’s monetary policy, thereby providing an alternative analysis tool. Correlation analysis results showed a strong positive and statistically significant relationship between Fed funds rate and the labor market, a strong negative and statistically significant relationship between Fed funds rate and the housing market, and a strong negative and statistically significant relationship between Fed funds rate and price stability. In contrast, results of the ARDL model bounds test for cointegration indicated that house price index (HPI), labor market, and price stability were cointegrated, hence exhibiting a long-run relationship with Fed funds rate. This research demonstrates that additional empirical studies using new techniques are required to reevaluate the Fisher effect and expand the understanding of the mechanism between interest rates and inflation. This issue is extremely important, particularly for countries such as the U.S., the UK adapting inflation targeting policy using interest rates as an operational target.

Highlights

  • The interest rate represents an essential tool for performing monetary policy

  • The study analyzed the effectiveness of interest rate policy of the Federal Reserve (Fed) funds rate on the housing market, labor market, and price stability

  • The study employed a list of interaction variables, namely, the Fed funds rate, the U.S labor market, U.S housing market, and price stability, to examine cointegrating properties between the identified variables

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Summary

Introduction

The interest rate represents an essential tool for performing monetary policy. Central banks and their decisions have different economic impacts as seen in the subprime mortgage crisis (SMC). Following the dot-com bubble, the Federal Reserve (Fed) monetary policy resulted in significant financial crises after the Great Depression in 1929. SMC determinants were restricted to the Fed policy and to conventional banking, securitization on corresponding mortgage loans, and credit derivatives that escalated the SMC and costing approximately between US$5 trillion and US$15 trillion (Adelson, 2013; Arestis & Karakitsos, 2009). The ripple effect of the crisis has threatened 27 national currencies and Europe’s global economic powerhouse (Al‐Rjoub & Azzam, 2012; Sekmen & Hatipoğlu, 2016)

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