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Article
Switching Volatility in a Nonlinear Open Economy
Journal of International Money and Finance (2021)
  • Jonathan Benchimol
  • Sergey Ivashchenko
Abstract
Uncertainty about an economy’s regime can change drastically around a crisis. An imported crisis such as the global financial crisis in the euro area highlights the effect of foreign shocks. Estimating an open-economy nonlinear dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model for the euro area and the United States including Markov-switching volatility shocks, we show that these shocks were significant during the global financial crisis compared with periods of calm. We describe how US shocks from both the real economy and financial markets affected the euro area economy and how bond reallocation occurred between short- and long-term maturities during the global financial crisis. Importantly, the estimated nonlinearities when domestic and foreign financial markets influence the economy, should not be neglected. The nonlinear behavior of market-related variables highlights the importance of higher-order estimation for providing additional interpretations to policymakers.
Keywords
  • DSGE,
  • Volatility Shocks,
  • Markov switching,
  • Open economy,
  • Financial crisis,
  • Nonlinearities
Publication Date
February, 2021
DOI
10.1016/j.jimonfin.2020.102287
Citation Information
Jonathan Benchimol and Sergey Ivashchenko. "Switching Volatility in a Nonlinear Open Economy" Journal of International Money and Finance Vol. 110 (2021)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/jonathanbenchimol/11/