1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910820496503321

Autore

Chen Sally

Titolo

Exploring the Dynamics of Global Liquidity / / Sally Chen, Philip Liu, Andrea Maechler, Chris Marsh, Sergejs Saksonovs, Hyun Shin

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Washington, D.C. : , : International Monetary Fund, , 2012

ISBN

1-4755-1281-3

1-4755-1280-5

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (48 p.)

Collana

IMF Working Papers

Altri autori (Persone)

LiuPhilip

MaechlerAndrea

MarshChris

SaksonovsSergejs

ShinHyun

Disciplina

332.1532

Soggetti

Liquidity (Economics)

Economic development

Accounting

Finance: General

Macroeconomics

Economic Theory

Financial Crises

International Financial Markets

General Financial Markets: Government Policy and Regulation

Financing Policy

Financial Risk and Risk Management

Capital and Ownership Structure

Value of Firms

Goodwill

'Panel Data Models

Spatio-temporal Models'

Portfolio Choice

Investment Decisions

Agriculture: Aggregate Supply and Demand Analysis

Prices

Public Administration

Public Sector Accounting and Audits

Finance

Economic theory & philosophy

Financial reporting, financial statements



Economic & financial crises & disasters

Liquidity

International liquidity

Supply shocks

Financial statements

Global financial crisis of 2008-2009

Asset and liability management

Economic theory

Public financial management (PFM)

Financial crises

Economics

International finance

Supply and demand

Finance, Public

Global Financial Crisis, 2008-2009

United States

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references.

Nota di contenuto

Cover; Contents; I. Introduction; II. Literature Review; III. A New Approach to Measuring Global Liquidity; A. Quantity Measures; B. Price Measures; IV. Identifying Drivers of Global Liquidity; A. Aggregate Trends of Core and Noncore Global Liquidity; B. Country-specific Trends of Core and Noncore Liabilities; C. Trends in External Liabilities of Countries to BIS Reporting Banks; V. The Real Impact of Global Liquidity; VI. Conclusion; Boxes; 1. Estimation of the Noncore Liquidity Price Index; 2. Indentifying Demand and Supply Shocks

3. A Panel Regression Approach to Assessing the Real Impact of Global Liquidity4. A VAR Approach to Assessing the Real Impact of Global Liquidity; Figures; 1. Total G4 Liquidity in Trillion Dollars and As a Ratio to GDP; 2. National Measures of the Quantity of Liquidity, Ratio to National Nominal GDP; 3. National Measures of the Quantity of Liquidity, Trillion US dollars; 4. Total External Liabilities to BIS Reporting Banks; 5. Nominal GDP Growth Rates; 6. Supply and Demand Shocks, Quantity and Price of Core Global Liquidity

7. Supply and Demand Shocks, Quantity and Price of Noncore Global Liquidity8. Supply and Demand Shocks to Liquidity: United States and Euro Area; 9. Country-Specific Supply and Demand Shocks: United Kingdom and Japan; 10. Supply and Demand Shocks: External Liabilities of G4 Economies; 11. Supply and Demand Shocks: External Liabilities of other countries to BIS Reporting Banks; 12. Impact of Core Demand Shock on Real GDP; 13. Impact of Core Supply Shock on Real GDP; 14. Impact of Noncore Demand Shock on Real GDP; 15. Impact of Noncore Supply Shock on Real GDP; Tables

1. Unit Root Tests of Liquidity Price and Quantity Indicators2. Estimation of Linear Trends; 3. Impact of Funding Shocks on Growth: Benchmark Model; 4. Impact of Funding Shocks on Growth: Separate Time Periods; 5. Impact of Funding Shocks on Growth: G4-Specific Impacts, Q1 1999-Q1 2011; Appendix: Measuring G4 Core and



Noncore Liabilities; References

Sommario/riassunto

This paper explores the concept of global liquidity, its measurement and macro-financial importance. We construct two sets of indicators for global liquidity: a quantity series distinguishing between core and noncore liabilities of financial intermediatires and a corresponding price series. Using price and quantity indicators simultaneously, it is possible to distinguish between shocks to the supply and demand for global liquidity, and isolate their impact on the economy. Our results confirm that global liquidity conditions matter for economic and financial stability, and points to indicators whose regular monitoring could be valuable to policymakers. .