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Second Quarter 1996
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
| Economic Review
was published until 1999. |
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New Tools for
Analyzing the Mexican Economy: Indexes of Coincident
and Leading Economic Indicators
Keith R. Phillips, Lucinda
Vargas, and Victor Zarnowitz
New composite indexes presented
in this article could prove useful in analyzing and
forecasting the Mexican economy. Keith Phillips, Lucinda
Vargas, and Victor Zarnowitz present composite indexes
of leading and coincident indexes for Mexico. In constructing
the indexes, the economists use an approach similar
to that developed by the National Bureau of Economic
Research to create the composite indexes of U.S. economic
activity. The authors classify peaks and troughs in
the Mexican business cycle since 1980. Using these business
cycle turning points, the authors determine which indicators
consistently turned down prior to recessions and turned
up prior to expansions. Eight of the best performing
indicators are combined to create a composite index
of leading economic indicators.
Forecasting
M2 Growth: An Exploration In Real Time
Evan F. Koenig
Evan Koenig presents a model that
has proved successful at reproducing the pattern of
M2 growth over the first half of the decade of the 1990s.
The model suggests that a large gap between long-term
bond yields and M2 deposit rates contributed importantly
to the slow money growth that persisted through the
end of 1994. The increased availability of bond market
mutual funds may also have played a role in the money
growth slowdown. The model can be combined with real-time
published forecasts of spending and interest rates to
yield predictions of future changes in money growth.
It has generally performed well in this regard. However,
in 1995 a sharp flattening of the yield curve led to
a more-pronounced-than-expected acceleration of M2 growth,
calling the future forecasting performance of the model
into question. Results for an M2 aggregate expanded
to include household bond funds are similar.
The Interest
Rate Sensitivity of Texas Industry
Lori L. Taylor and Mine K.
Yucel
A key factor in forecasting a
region's growth is anticipating how a region will respond
to changes in national policy. One important way national
policy affects a region is through real interest rates.
Forecasting regional growth, therefore, requires good
estimates of the interest rate sensitivity of regional
industries. In this study, Lori Taylor and Mine Yucel
use vector autoregression analysis to examine the relationship
between changes in real short-term interest rates and
changes in Texas industry employment. They find that
while a few industries are moderately sensitive to interest
rate movements, most Texas industries are insensitive
to changes in real interest rates. Moreover, they find
that Texas total nonagricultural employment is insensitive
to changes in real interest rates. As such, their analysis
suggests that real interest rate movements influence
the composition of Texas employment rather than its
level.
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