How Unemployment Affects Bond Prices: A Mixed Frequency Google Nowcasting Approach
Thomas Dimpfl and
Tobias Langen ()
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Tobias Langen: University of Tübingen
Computational Economics, 2019, vol. 54, issue 2, No 4, 573 pages
Abstract:
Abstract We analyze the relationship between unemployment rate changes and government bond yields during and after the most recent financial crisis across ten industrialized countries. The study is conducted on a weekly basis and we therefore nowcast unemployment data, which are only available once a month, on a weekly frequency using Google search query data. In order to account for the time series’ long-memory components during the first-stage nowcasting and the second-stage modeling, we draw on Corsi’s (J Financ Economet 7:174–196, 2009) heterogeneous autoregressive time series model. In particular, we adapt this idea to a setting of mixed-frequency nowcasting. Our results indicate that Google searches greatly increase the nowcasting accuracy of unemployment rate changes. The impact of an idiosyncratic rise in unemployment on bond yields turns out to be positive for European countries while it is negative for the United States and Australia. The speed of the response also varies. Not unexpectedly, bond yields do not have an impact on unemployment. Our findings have interesting implications for the way shocks are absorbed in economic systems that differ, in particular, with respect to the central bank’s core tasks.
Keywords: Nowcasting; Long-memory components; Heterogeneous VAR; Unemployment; Bond yields; Google searches (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019
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DOI: 10.1007/s10614-018-9840-7
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