On the propagation of the fluctuations of stock returns on growth: Is the global effect important?
Date
2002Source
Journal of Policy ModelingVolume
24Pages
487-502Google Scholar check
Keyword(s):
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Increasing capitalization in developed economies has attracted the attention of policy-makers and economists with respect to the effects of unanticipated changes in stock returns on growth. This paper attempts to examine empirically the response of output growth to shocks in real stock returns. Evidence from OECD countries by use of Vector Autoregressions shows that output growth does not respond significantly to shocks in domestic real stock returns. The picture, however, changes when a shock in foreign (United States) real stock returns is considered. A portion of excess output volatility in these countries can be explained by innovations in foreign real returns, which indicates that in the global economic environment growth is more exposed to financial instability originating from abroad. © 2002 Society for Policy Modeling. Published by Elsevier Science Inc. All rights reserved.