Time changing effects of external shocks on macroeconomic fluctuations in Peru: empirical application using regime-switching VAR models with stochastic volatility
Abstract
This article quantifies and analyzes the evolving impact of external shocks on Peru’s macroeconomic fluctuations in 1994Q1-2019Q4. For this purpose, we use a group of models with regimeswitching time-varying parameters and stochastic volatility (RS-VAR-SV), as proposed by Chan
and Eisenstat (2018). The data suggest a model with contemporaneous coefficients and constant lags and intercepts, but with regime-switching variances; and point to the existence of two
regimes. The IRFs, FEVDs, and HDs show that: (i) China growth shocks have a higher impact
on Peru’s output growth (around 0.8%); (ii) financial shocks contract domestic output growth
by 0.3% and domestic monetary policy is synchronized with Fed rate movements; (iii) external
shocks explain 35% and 70% of output fluctuations under regimes 1 and 2, respectively; and (iv)
China growth shocks contributed 1.0 p.p. to the 1.1-p.p. increase (around 89%) in Peru’s output
growth between regimes 1 and 2. Additionally, we validate these results by performing seven
robustness exercises consisting in changing priors, reordering variables, changing variables, and
using four different specications for the baseline model.
Temas
Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: