Repository logo
 

The Interest Rate Effects of Government Debt Maturity: Solving the Bond Conundrum


Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Change log

Abstract

Using an empirical model, this paper finds that shortening the average maturity of US Treasury debt held outside the Federal Reserve by one year reduces the five-year forward 10-year yield by between 130 and 150 basis points. Based on a pre-crisis period, these estimates suggest portfolio balance effects are unlikely to reflect only post-crisis market conditions. These findings also offer a partial explanation for the Greenspan conundrum: the fact that long-term interest rates in the mid-2000s rose less than expected after a rise in the Fed fund rate may have been due, to some extent, to the concomitant shortening of government debt maturity.

Description

Is Part Of

Publisher

Faculty of Economics, University of Cambridge

Publisher DOI

Publisher URL

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as All rights reserved