Measuring economic policy uncertainty
We develop a new index of economic policy uncertainty (EPU) based on newspaper coverage frequency. Several types of evidence – including human readings of 12,000 newspaper articles – indicate that our index proxies for movements in policy-related economic uncertainty. Our US index spikes near tight presidential elections, Gulf Wars I and II, the 9/11 attacks, the failure of Lehman Brothers, the 2011 debt-ceiling dispute and other major battles over fiscal policy. Using firm-level data, we find that policy uncertainty raises stock price volatility and reduces investment and employment in policy-sensitive sectors like defense, healthcare, and infrastructure construction. At the macro level, policy uncertainty innovations foreshadow declines in investment, output, and employment in the United States and, in a panel VAR setting, for 12 major economies. Extending our US index back to 1900, EPU rose dramatically in the 1930s (from late 1931) and has drifted upwards since the 1960s.
| Item Type | Working paper |
|---|---|
| Keywords | economic uncertainty,policy uncertainty,business cycles,fluctuations |
| Departments | Centre for Economic Performance |
| Date Deposited | 14 Jan 2016 14:48 |
| URI | https://researchonline.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/64986 |
Explore Further
- http://cep.lse.ac.uk/pubs/download/dp1379.pdf (Publisher)