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by Ben S. Bernanke
November/December 1990
Economists have long understood that financial market
variables contain considerable information about the
future of the economy. Recently a number of researchers
have pointed out that interest rates and interest rate
spreads--that is, differences between interest rates
on alternative financial assets--can be effective predictors
of the economy.
This finding raises a number of questions, possibly
the most important being why interest rates and spreads
predict the course of the economy so well. The author’s
tentative conclusion is that the spread between commercial
paper and Treasury bill rates has historically been
a good predictor because it combines information about
both monetary and nonmonetary factors ~iffecting the
economy, and because it does this more accurately than
alternative interest rate-based measures.
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