Back to Search Start Over

Investigating the Causal Linkages among Inflation, Interest Rate, and Economic Growth in Pakistan under the Influence of COVID-19 Pandemic: A Wavelet Transformation Approach.

Authors :
Hayat, Muhammad Azmat
Ghulam, Huma
Batool, Maryam
Naeem, Muhammad Zahid
Ejaz, Abdullah
Spulbar, Cristi
Birau, Ramona
Source :
Journal of Risk & Financial Management; Jun2021, Vol. 14 Issue 6, p1-22, 22p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

This research is the earliest attempt to understand the impact of inflation and the interest rate on output growth in the context of Pakistan using the wavelet transformation approach. For this study, we used monthly data on inflation, the interest rate, and industrial production from January 1991 to May 2020. The COVID-19 pandemic has affected economies around the world, especially in view of the measures taken by governmental authorities regarding enforced lockdowns and social distancing. Traditional studies empirically explored the relationship between these important macroeconomic variables only for the short run and long run. Firstly, we employed the autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) cointegration test and two causality tests (Granger causality and Toda-- Yamamoto) to check the cointegration properties and causal relationship among these variables, respectively. After confirming the long-run causality from the ARDL bound test, we decomposed the time series of growth, inflation, and the interest rate into different time scales using wavelet analysis which allows us to study the relationship among variables for the very short run, medium run, long run, and very long run. The continuous wavelet transform (CWT), the cross-wavelet transform (XWT), cross-wavelet coherence (WTC), and multi-scale Granger causality tests were used to investigate the co-movement and nature of the causality between inflation and growth and the interest rate and growth. The results of the wavelet and multi-scale Granger causality tests show that the causal relationship between these variables is not the same across all time horizons; rather, it is unidirectional in the short-run and medium-run but bi-directional in the long-run. Therefore, this study suggests that the central bank should try to maintain inflation and the interest rate at a low level in the short run and medium run instead of putting too much pressure on these variables in the long-run. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19118066
Volume :
14
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Risk & Financial Management
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
151069647
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14060277