Output, Political Uncertainty, and Stock Market Fluctuations: Germany, 1890 - 1940
George Bittlingmayer
No 87, CESifo Working Paper Series from CESifo
Abstract:
The sources of stock volatility and especially higher volatility in recessions have puzzled financial economists. One explanation emerges from recent theoretical work that points to political and regulatory uncertainty as a source of output fluctuations. Since political uncertainty can also generate stock price volatility, its joint effects on stock prices and output may explain why stock volatility is correlated with output declines. Evidence from a part1cularly instructive natural experiment, the transition from Imperial to Weimar Germany, supports the view that stock price volatility reflects an uncertain political climate. Statistically, stock price volatility and the ultimate factors it represents play a major role in explaining the post-World-War-1 collapse of the German economy and subsequent output fluctuations. A doubling of stock volatility implies a decline of output of --0 to -15 percent.
Date: 1995
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:ces:ceswps:_87
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