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IR to a negative shock

PostPosted: Thu Nov 30, 2006 10:29 am
by nakov
Hi,
is it possible to plot the response to a negative 1 standard deviation shock? How?
Anton

Re: IR to a negative shock

PostPosted: Fri Dec 01, 2006 9:51 am
by StephaneAdjemian
Hi,

Yes it's possible. You just have to define an auxiliary variable. For instance, if epsilon is your exogenous variable, you can create an endogenous variable EPSILON such that EPSILON = -epsilon.

With an approximation at order one, the response to a negative shock is minus the response to a positive shock.

Best,
Stéphane.


nakov wrote:Hi,
is it possible to plot the response to a negative 1 standard deviation shock? How?
Anton

PostPosted: Fri Dec 01, 2006 12:35 pm
by nakov
Hi, thanks,
I was referring to 2nd order approximation in which responses to shocks can be asymmetric. But I guess a similar trick may be applied - the shock process can be redefined such that the innovation enters with a minus sign. In that case a positive 1 standard deviation of the innovation would be like a negative shock, am I right?

PostPosted: Wed Dec 13, 2006 9:19 pm
by MichelJuillard
Yes, that is the idea

Best

Michel

PostPosted: Fri Dec 15, 2006 4:41 pm
by nakov
Thanks a lot!
Anton


MichelJuillard wrote:Yes, that is the idea

Best

Michel