1996
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.871177
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Alternative Specifications of the German Term Structure and Its' Information Content Regarding Inflation

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Cited by 16 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Similar results concerning the information content of the German term structure regarding future changes in inflation rate were obtained in previous papers, namely Schich (1996), Gerlach (1995) and Mishkin (1991), using different samples and testing procedures. 29 …”
Section: /Hdglqj Lqglfdwru Surshuwlhv Ri Idfwru Iru Lqiodwlrqsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…Similar results concerning the information content of the German term structure regarding future changes in inflation rate were obtained in previous papers, namely Schich (1996), Gerlach (1995) and Mishkin (1991), using different samples and testing procedures. 29 …”
Section: /Hdglqj Lqglfdwru Surshuwlhv Ri Idfwru Iru Lqiodwlrqsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…In these papers, the results were motivated by invoking the Fisher equation, which decomposes a nominal interest rate into a real rate and expected inflation, and by assuming rational expectations. Schich (1996) found comparable results for Germany, which were even stronger than in the US for some maturity combinations.…”
mentioning
confidence: 64%
“…11 Due to the fact that the inflation rates are forward-looking, some observations are lost, and the actual sample ends between 10 The U.S. rates are estimated using the tax-adjusted, cubic spline methodology in McCulloch (1975) from 1955 to 1991 and the smoothing splines methodology (Fisher, Nychka, Zervos, 1995) thereafter. The German rates are estimated using the linear-logarithmic approach traditionally used by the Bundesbank, and described in Schich (1996). 11 The stability test results are similar when the larger data sample, starting in 1955:01 is used.…”
Section: Yield Curve and Future Inflation Rates Empirical Results Formentioning
confidence: 98%
“…They are zerocoupon rates and yields-to-maturity, respectively. 10 While strictly speaking, zero-coupon interest rate would be required according to theory, the choice between zero-coupon interest rates or yields-to-maturity does not seem to matter in practice for purposes such as ours (Schich, 1996).…”
Section: Yield Curve and Future Inflation Rates Empirical Results Formentioning
confidence: 99%