2015
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.2717790
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Shocking Language: Understanding the Macroeconomic Effects of Central Bank Communication

Abstract: We explore how the multi-dimensional aspects of information released by the FOMC has effects on both market and real economic variables. Using tools from computational linguistics, we measure the information released by the FOMC on the state of economic conditions, as well as the guidance the FOMC provides about future monetary policy decisions. Employing these measures within a FAVAR framework, we find that shocks to forward guidance are more important than the FOMC communication of current economic condition… Show more

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Cited by 70 publications
(107 citation statements)
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References 35 publications
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“…The 29 evidence that Odyssean shocks became prevalent during the time when the ECB implemented explicit forward guidance policies and dropped the term "never pre-commit" from its communication also underlines that central banks can have some control over how markets understand those communications. Understanding better how central banks can influence the way their communication affects financial markets-either via language (Hansen and McMahon 2016)…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The 29 evidence that Odyssean shocks became prevalent during the time when the ECB implemented explicit forward guidance policies and dropped the term "never pre-commit" from its communication also underlines that central banks can have some control over how markets understand those communications. Understanding better how central banks can influence the way their communication affects financial markets-either via language (Hansen and McMahon 2016)…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Depending on whether the focus is on content or tone, the literature finds differences in persistence of communication effects and their impact on real economic variables. Hansen and McMahon (2016) extract information on the content of FOMC statements, in particular on the state of the economy and forward guidance. They find that forward guidance has historically been more important than other types of information (similar to the finding of Conrad and Lamla (2010) for the EU).…”
Section: Existing Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some analysis codes the communication contents by subjectively assigning values to the texts that are perceived as dovish or hawkish (Jansen and De Haan 2005;Ehrmann and Fratzscher 2007;Berger, Nitsch, and Lybek 2006), or using semantic orientation and text classification to quantify dimensions of the text (Lucca and Trebbi 2009;Hansen and McMahon 2016;Hansen, McMahon, and Prat 2018). These techniques are useful in identifying the direction of communication and can augment the type of analysis that we undertake in this paper.…”
Section: Window Guidancementioning
confidence: 99%