Document details

The effect of monetary policy on household consumption expenditures in Portugal

Author(s): Duarte, João B. ; Pereira, Nuno

Date: 2023

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10362/158043

Origin: Repositório Institucional da UNL

Subject(s): Consumption; D31; Dynamic factor models; E21; E52; E58; Heterogeneous agents; High-frequency identification; Monetary transmission; VAR; Economics and Econometrics; Economics, Econometrics and Finance(all)


Description

Funding Information: We thank the Fundação Francisco Manuel dos Santos financial support. Joao Duarte work was funded by Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (UIDB/00124/2020, UIDP/00124/2020 and Social Sciences DataLab - PINFRA/22209/2016), POR Lisboa and POR Norte (Social Sciences DataLab, PINFRA/22209/2016), PTDC/EGE- ECO/7620/2020 and CEECIND/03227/2018. Publisher Copyright: © 2022, The Author(s) under exclusive licence to ISEG – Instituto Superior de Economia e Gestão.

We follow Slacalek et al. (2020) monetary transmission decomposition approach to investigate the effects of monetary policy shocks on household consumption expenditures in Portugal since joining the euro area. Extending their analysis to Portugal, we quantify the monetary policy transmission channels using a combination of micro-level household data from the 3rd wave of the Household Finance and Consumption Survey and structural vector autoregressions estimated using aggregate-level data and identified using high-frequency data around monetary policy meetings. We find that the wealthy hand-to-mouth households’ consumption has the most significant reaction to monetary shocks because of extensive housing wealth and net interest rate exposure channels. In addition, due to its large size as a group in the Portuguese economy, we find that the wealthy hand-to-mouth households’ consumption response explains why the aggregate consumption reacts more to monetary shocks in Portugal than in other European countries.

Document Type Journal article
Language English
Contributor(s) NOVA School of Business and Economics (NOVA SBE); RUN
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