Greek economic policy uncertainty: Does it matter for Europe? Evidence from a dynamic connectedness decomposition approach

Nikolaos Antonakakis, David Gabauer, Rangan Gupta

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This study examines the propagation mechanism of economic policy uncertainty shocks within Greece and between Greece and Europe over the period of January, 1998 and May, 2018. Further insights about the Greek-internal and external dynamics of economic policy uncertainty are provided by employing the recently developed dynamic connectedness decomposition approach of Gabauer and Gupta (2018). Our analysis reveals that Greek economic policy uncertainty is dominating the European economic policy uncertainty nearly permanently throughout the period of analysis. In particular, the Greek banking policy uncertainty (capital controls) and Greek currency policy uncertainty (Grexit rumors) have been significant net pairwise transmitters with respect to the European economic policy uncertainty. In addition, the Greek-internal transmission mechanism indicates that, Greek fiscal policy uncertainty indices are driven by Greek related monetary policy indices. Finally, our impulse response analysis suggests that the persistence of monetary policy related shocks is varying over time and increased after the Global Financial Crisis of 2007–2009. This magnifying effect explains partially the prolonged recovery of the European economy.
Original languageEnglish
Article number122280
Pages (from-to)122280
Number of pages13
JournalPhysica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications
Volume535
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2019

Fields of science

  • 101007 Financial mathematics
  • 101018 Statistics
  • 101026 Time series analysis
  • 101029 Mathematical statistics
  • 102009 Computer simulation
  • 102037 Visualisation
  • 502025 Econometrics
  • 502051 Economic statistics
  • 509 Other Social Sciences

JKU Focus areas

  • Transformation in Finance and Financial Institutions

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