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Money and Uncertainty in the Philippines: A Friedmanite Perspective

Money and Uncertainty in the Philippines: A Friedmanite Perspective. Safety and efficiency of the financial system August 27th 2007 Manila, Philippines. A. Baunto, C. Bordes, S. Maveyraud-Tricoire and P. Rous. Organisation of the paper. Friedman’s proposals Stylised facts

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Money and Uncertainty in the Philippines: A Friedmanite Perspective

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  1. Money and Uncertainty in the Philippines: A Friedmanite Perspective Safety and efficiency of the financial system August 27th 2007 Manila, Philippines A. Baunto, C. Bordes, S. Maveyraud-Tricoire and P. Rous

  2. Organisation of the paper • Friedman’sproposals • Stylisedfacts • Money variability and incomevelocity of money • Inflation, uncertainty and output growth • Conclusion

  3. Friedman’sproposals • Money Supply Volatility Hypothesis: “An exceptional volatility of monetary growth increases the degree of perceive uncertainty and thereby increases the demand for money” [Friedman, 1984]; and • Inflation Variability and Growth Hypothesis: “Inflation, particularly highly variable inflation, interferes with growth by (a) introducing static into the messages transmitted by the price system, increasing the uncertainty facing individuals and business enterprises, which encourages them to divert attention from productive to protective activities, and (b) inducing governments to adopt such counterproductive false cures as price controls and incomes policy. These adverse effects have sometimes been more than offset by other forces, so that high inflation has not prevented rapid growth”. [Friedman, 1980, pp. 55-6]

  4. Money variability and incomevelocity of money • Framework of analysis • Previous literature Friedman, 1983, 1984; Hall and Noble, 1987; Brocato and Smith, 1989; Mehra, 1987, 1989; Thornton and Molyneux, 1995; McMillin, 1991; Chowdhury and Wheeler, 1999; Chowdhury, 1988; Lynch and Ewing, 1995; McCornac, 1994; Baliamoune-Lutz and Haughton, 2004 ; Choong, et. al. 2004 ; Bordes, 1990; Thornton, 1995; Payne, 1992; Arize, 1993; Thornton, 1991; Serletis and Shahmoradi, 2005

  5. Money variability and income velocity of money Figure 1. M1 growth rate and Income velocity

  6. Money variability and income velocity of money • Methodology • Use of Bai-Perron (2003) technique to endogenouslydetermine multiple structural breaks in M1 velocity • Use of GARCH model

  7. Money variability and income velocity of money

  8. Money variability and income velocity of money Results

  9. Money variability and income velocity of money

  10. Money variability and income velocity of money

  11. Money variability and income velocity of money Figure 2. Conditional variability of M1 growth and income velocity (log, detrended)

  12. Money variability and income velocity of money

  13. Money variability and income velocity of money

  14. Inflation, uncertainty and output growth Framework of analysis with

  15. Inflation, uncertainty and output growth • Previousliterature three surrounding issues: • Link between high inflation rates and variability of inflation (Davis and Kanago, 2000; Fountas, 2001; Fountas et al., 2002; Grier et al., 2004; Aspergis, 2004; Kontonikas, 2004; and Thornton, 2006) • Link between uncertainty and money growth (Grier and Perry (2000), Hayford (2000), Fountas et al. (2002), Aspergis (2004) and Grier et al. (2004)) • Link between the level and the variability of both inflation and growth (Wilson and Culver, 1999; Grier et al., 2004; Wilson, 2006; and Fountas and Karanasos, 2007) Mixed results but better when GARCH models are used

  16. Inflation, uncertainty and output growth • Methodology • Use of filters to decompose real GDP sothat: • Use of Threshold GARCH model: • Use of pseudo-bootstrap to increaserobustness

  17. Inflation, uncertainty and output growth Results

  18. Conclusion • strong evidence in favor of Friedman’s proposals on uncertainties in money supply and inflation, and economic growth: • high variability of money growth is linked with a diminution in the income velocity of narrow definitions of money • high level of inflation Granger causes a higher variability of inflation, which, to a certain extent, Granger causes a diminution of the potential output.

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