The Inverted Yield Curve and the Components of GDP
Abstract
When 3-month Treasury rates are greater than 10 -year Treasury rates an inverted
yield curve occurs. When this state is reached some argue that a recession is on the
horizon, typically 6 months to a year down the road. Here, I reframe the question of
whether inverted yield curves predict recessions in the US and ask what an inverted
yield curve predicts. Using a Probit model I find that when 10-year US Treasury bonds
yield less than 3-month US Treasury bills, a US recession, while probable, is not
certain. Moreover, I find that indeed the strength of this indicator has weakened over
the last 20 years. However, my findings do not suggest that an inverted yield curve
provides no information about the future. In fact, I find that an inverted yield curve
strongly predicts movements in the consumer durables and fixed private investment
series of US GDP.
DOI/handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10576/3572Collections
- 2014 - Volume 17 - Issue 1 [4 items ]