• Title of article

    The Predictability of FOMC Decisions: Evidence from the Volcker and Greenspan Chairmanships

  • Author/Authors

    John S. Lapp، نويسنده , , Douglas K. Pearce and Surachit Laksanasut، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
  • Pages
    16
  • From page
    312
  • To page
    327
  • Abstract
    This paper examines whether there is a systematic relationship between FOMC decisions and publicly available data that would potentially allow the public to anticipate FOMC policy changes. We characterize each FOMC decision as a move to tighten, ease, or leave policy unchanged and use ordered probit to estimate models of the probabilities of each choice. We find a statistically significant relationship between FOMC decisions and measures of inflation and real activity, but this relationship does not accurately predict the directions of FOMC decisions. While short-term interest rate changes prior to FOMC meetings have predictive power, suggesting that the financial market can anticipate FOMC decisions somewhat, other financial variables such as stock price movements appear unrelated to FOMC policy changes. Overall, FOMC decisions are not highly predictable using publicly available data, and adding the private information contained in the FOMCʹs Greenbook does not significantly increase the predictive accuracy.
  • Journal title
    Southern Economic Journal
  • Serial Year
    2003
  • Journal title
    Southern Economic Journal
  • Record number

    709583