Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-hc48f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T01:44:42.416Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Les déterminants des taux d'intérêts.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 August 2016

Manuel Hernandez-Lopez*
Affiliation:
Institut de Recherches Economiques
Get access

Extract

Le taux d'intérêt, “r”, étant un prix, il est déterminé par la confrontation d'une offre et d'une demande. Ceci ne nous apprend rien cependant, tant qu'on ne peut déterminer avec précision ces deux grandeurs: le problème des déterminants de “r” n'est autre que celui de l'identification précise de l'offre et de la demande de fonds.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Université catholique de Louvain, Institut de recherches économiques et sociales 1973 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

The topic of this article is the determinants of interest rates in the case of a small and open economy such as Belgium. There are four basic variables which operate as determinants of interest rates, be it short or long term, namely price, money, economic activity, and direct international influence. However some effects of these basic variables work slowly and according to certains distributions. It seems that price influences strongly the trend of interest rates; but there is no statistical evidence that the evolutions of inflation rates affect the evolution of interest rates. Liquidity effect of ΔM on “r” is obvious and instantaneous, but it decreases fast, and disappears altogether within two or three quarters. From then on, the indirect effects of ΔM on “r” begin to act and reach a peack after about six quarters. The total effect of ΔM on “r” is practically nil in the long period.

Various inquiries lead us to the conclusion that the fonctions of short and long term interest rates are quite different: for example, short term interest rate is greatly affected by both cycle and external influence, whereas long term interest rates are so much affected by those factors.

Seing that several indirect and feed-back effects can be important, and direct pull between short and long term interest rates also evident, the author proposes a new approach towards interest rates explanation: simultaneous solution of two different functions, (both for short and long term), which must be integrated within yet another model. This model should be one which would have ΔM, P, Y, “rst” and “rlt” as endogenous variables.

References

Bibliographie

Cagan, Ph. and Gandolfi, A. (1969), “Monetary Theory. The Lag in Monetary Policy as implied by the Time Pattern of Monetary Effects on Interest Rates” American Economec Review. Google Scholar
Cagan, P. (1966), “Changes in the Cyclical Behavior of Interest Rates”, The Review of Economics and Statistics.10.2307/1927080Google Scholar
Feldstein, M. and Eckstein, O. (1970), “The Fundamental Determinants of the Interest Rate”, The Review of Economics and Statistics.10.2307/1926313Google Scholar
Friedman, M. (1968), “Dollars and Deficits”, Inflation, Monetary Policy and the Balance of Payments.Google Scholar
Gibson, W. (1968), “The Sensivity of Interest Rates to Changes in Money and Income”, Journal of Political Economy.10.1086/259417Google Scholar
Gibson, W. (1970), “Price-Expectations Effects on Interest RatesJournal of Finance (USA).10.1111/j.1540-6261.1970.tb00410.xGoogle Scholar
Hernandez-Lopez, M. (1972), “La structure des taux d'intérêt d'après les termesRecherches économiques de Louvain.Google Scholar
Jordan, L. (1969), “Elements of Money Stock Determination”, Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis.Google Scholar
Keynes, , “General Theory of Employment Interest and MoneyLondres.10.1007/978-3-319-70344-2Google Scholar
Kessel, R. (1962) “The Cyclical Behavior of the Term Structure of Interest Rates”, N.B.E.R., Occasional Papers, n° 91.Google Scholar
Lee, C.H. (1970), “The Balance of Trade, Interest Rates, and Capital Movements” in Kiklos, n° 1.10.1111/j.1467-6435.1970.tb02545.xGoogle Scholar
Lutz, F. (1967), “The Theory of Interest”, Holland, Dordrechts.Google Scholar
Modigliani, F. and Sucht, R. (1966), “Innovation in Interest Rate Policy”, American Economic Review.Google Scholar
Modigliani, F. and Sucht, R. (1967), “Debt Management and the Term Structure of Interest Rates”, Journal of Political Economy.10.1086/259334Google Scholar
Meiselman, D. (1962), “The Term Structure of Interest Rates”, Englewood Cliffs, Prentice Hall.Google Scholar
Yohe, and Karnosky, (1969), “Interest Rates and Price Level Changes, 1952-1969” in Federal Reserve Bank of Saint Louis.Google Scholar
Mundell, R. (1963) “Inflation and Real Interest”, Journal of Political Economy.10.1086/258771Google Scholar
Pierson, G. (1970), “Effect of Economic Policy on the Term Structure of Interest Rates”, Review of Economics and Statistics.10.2307/1927591Google Scholar
Sargent, J. (1969), “Commodity Price Expectations and the Interest RateQuarterly Journal of Economics.10.2307/1883997Google Scholar
Silber, W. (1969), “An Empirical Study of Interest Rate Determination”, The Review of Economics and Statistics.Google Scholar
Willet, Th. and Forte, Fr. (1969), “Interest Rate Policy and External BalanceQuarterly Journal of Economics.10.2307/1883082Google Scholar