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A Longitudinal Analysis of the Stability of Household Money Demand
Author(s) -
Jan Tin
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
modern economy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2152-7245
pISSN - 2152-7261
DOI - 10.4236/me.2011.23046
Subject(s) - economics , volatility (finance) , demand for money , aggregate demand , demand curve , monetary economics , interest rate , stability (learning theory) , econometrics , microeconomics , monetary policy , machine learning , computer science
Past aggregate time-series studies, conducted under the assumption of a representative economic agent, frequently show that the demand for narrowly defined M1, especially non-interest-yielding demand deposit, is unstable during periods of financial innovations. Whether this is longitudinally the case among life-cycle savers is unclear. This study utilizes longitudinal data to take another look and find that volatility in the demand for non-interest-earning checking accounts in the mid and late 1990s is attributable solely to the portion held for the transactions motive. When the conventional Baumol-Tobin model is extended to include human capital and family formation variables representing the life-cycle motive, equilibrium money demand is a stable function of both economic and demographic variables

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