China's GDP-at-Risk: Real-Time Monitoring, Risk Tracing, and Macroeconomic Policy Effects

Jianli Sui, Wenqiang Lv, Xiang Gao*, Kees G. Koedijk

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Timely monitoring GDP-at-risk and tracing economic downside risk sources can help establish effective risk warning and prevention systems. This study constructs a probability distribution for China's economic growth with skewness determined by a multidimensional predictor information set of macro fundamentals. Such a treatment allows us to identify changing drivers of economic downside risks during monitoring GDP-at-risk's dynamic evolutionary path. We also employ a time-varying parameter vector autoregression model with random volatility to explore the heterogeneous impacts of different macroeconomic policy instruments on economic slowdowns. Our results provide empirical support for macroeconomic management and policy formulation in emerging markets. We reach three conclusions. First, the dynamics of GDP-at-risk exhibit significant event-driven characteristics, and economic downside risk increases significantly under the influence of extreme events. Moreover, the probability distribution of economic growth is asymmetric–as the downside risk of the economy increases, its upside potential increases disproportionately. Second, the time-varying risk trace of GDP-at-risk shows that the contribution of financial conditions and local government debt to economic downside risk declines. The importance of the risk-driving role of housing price growth gradually increases, suggesting that China's property prices can provide more valuable early warning information about future growth risk, allowing time for precise preventive measures. Nevertheless, interest rates and inflation as risk divers have consistently minimal impacts. Third, the heterogeneity impulse response function of GDP-at-risk suggests that quantity-based monetary policy and fiscal policy can manage economic downside risks in the short run. In contrast, price-based monetary policy can curb economic overheating and reduce downside risks in the medium to long term. Therefore, the effect of price-based monetary policy is more sustainable in China.

Original languageEnglish
Article number103150
Number of pages17
JournalJournal of International Money and Finance
Volume147
Early online date4 Aug 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier Ltd

Funding

The authors thank the editor and anonymous referees. We also gratefully acknowledge financial support from the Major Program of National Social Science Fund of China (21&ZD073) .

FundersFunder number
National Office for Philosophy and Social SciencesZD073

    Keywords

    • GDP-at-risk
    • Macroeconomic policy
    • Quantile regression
    • Real-time monitoring
    • Risk tracing

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