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Interest Rates in the Nineteen-Fifties

Thomas J. Sargent

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1968

ECONOMISTS have recently begun to devote an increasing amount of attention to the relationships among interest rates on various instruments. Rates on instruments which differ with respect to maturity alone, all other features supposedly being held constant, have in particular received a great deal of attention since the publication of Meiselman's [7] work in 1962. While the term structure has certainly received the most concern, import-ant contributions have been made to the broader problem of studying relationships among rates on bonds which differ with respect to features other than maturity.' An especially important aspect of this broader area of research lies in examining the relationships between rates on government and corporate bonds. Knowledge of the characteristics of these relationships is important for an understanding of the paths through which monetary policy affects yields on corporate bonds, and hence, perhaps, expenditures on investment. This paper presents the results of an examination of the relationships among several interest rates on government and corporate bonds for the period January 1951 through December 1960. Monthly data are used, and series for the rates on three-month treasury bills, one, two, three, four, five, ten, and twentyyear government bonds, commercial paper, and Moody's Aaa's and Baa's are studied.2 This list represents an array of instruments ranging over a broad maturity spectrum and featuring various levels of quality. Tools of spectral and cross-spectral analysis are used to study the behavior of the series and the relationships among the series at various important components of oscillation.3 In addition to calculating the standard statistics associated with the spectrum and cross-spectrum, the relatively new tool of complex demodulation is employed to study the seasonal behavior of selected rates.4

DOI
10.2307/1926192
Volume
50 (2)
Pages
164
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