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VoxEU Column Economic history Monetary Policy

The slope of the term structure and recessions: Evidence from the UK, 1822–2016

It is well known that the slope of the term structure of interest rates contains information for forecasting the likelihood of a recession in the US. This column examines whether the same is true for the UK. Focusing on three periods – the pre-WWI era, the inter-war years, and the post-WWII period – it finds strong support for the inverted yield curve being a predictor of UK recessions for both the pre-WWI and post-WWII periods, but the evidence is less conclusive for the inter-war years.

As the yield curve in the US has now once again inverted, following the Fed’s attempt to raise the short-term official interest rate back towards ‘normal’ levels, there has been renewed interest in the question of whether such inversion, with short-term rates higher than the long-term rate, has been, and remains, an effective predictor of recessions. Virtually all the empirical work on this so far has been done for the US (e.g. Gerlach and Stuart 2018 and the related references therein).

An interesting question to ask, therefore, is whether the same phenomenon works equally well in the UK. We investigate this by examining whether the monthly spread between long interest rates (the consol yield before 1914 and the yield on 10-year gilts after WWI) and short interest rates (the yield on three-month Treasury bills) is able to predict a recession up to 18 months ahead across three historical periods: the pre-WWI era from 1822 to 1913, the inter-war years between 1920 and 1938, and the post-WWII period beginning in 1946.

A key requirement to carry out this analysis is the availability of a suitable recession indicator at a monthly frequency. The monthly OECD recession indicator for the UK is only available from 1955, and so it is a useful empirical exercise to construct such an indicator for the initial years of the post-WWII period and for the earlier historical periods. We outline how this is done is outlined in detail in Mills et al. (2018), with the indicators so obtained (which are defined from peak-to-trough of their associated business cycles) being shown in Figures 1–3 for each of the three historical periods. The pre-WWI recession indicator is obtained after interpolating an annual business cycle to obtain monthly values, while the inter-war recession indicator is derived from a business cycle adjusted to deal with the rapid declines in GDP between May and July 1921 and during the general strike of April to December 1926. The indicators derived for the pre-WWII periods match well the usual annual recession chronology for the UK (e.g. Capie and Mills 1991).

Figure 1 Peak-to-trough recession indicator for 1822–1913 with associated business cycle

Figure 2 Peak-to-trough recession indicator for 1920–1938 with associated business cycle

Figure 3 Peak-to-trough recession indicator for 1946–2016 with associated business cycle

For each of the three periods, these recession indictors were regressed on the current spread for forecast horizons up to 18 months, with the current long interest rate and current recession indicator included as additional control variables. Two econometric issues need to be confronted when estimating these regressions. The discrete nature of the recession indicator, which takes the value 1 in a recession and 0 otherwise, requires the use of a probit regression, while the presence of future values of the indicator as the dependent variable introduces autocorrelation into the regression residuals that needs to be accounted for when constructing coefficient standard errors and associated confidence intervals.

Figure 4 shows the spread coefficient estimates for the pre-WWI era of 1822–1913. The estimates are negative for all forecast horizons and are significantly so for horizons greater than one month. Figure 5 shows the spread coefficient estimates for the inter-war years, 1920–1938. The estimates are negative for all forecast horizons, being significant at the 10% level or less for horizons between five and ten months. Figure 6 shows the spread coefficient estimates for the post-WWII period. Once again, the estimates are negative for all forecast horizons and significantly so for all horizons less than eighteen months.

Figure 4 Spread coefficient estimates for 1822–1913  

Note: The candlesticks in Figures 4–6 represent approximate 95% confidence intervals

Figure 5 Spread coefficient estimates for 1920–1938 

Note: Figures above candlesticks are marginal probability values.

Figure 6 Spread coefficient estimates for 1946–2016

Because a negative coefficient on the current spread implies that the ‘inverted’ yield curve does forecast future recessions, strong support is found for the hypothesis that the inverted yield curve is also a predictor of UK recessions for horizons up to 18 months for both the pre-WWI and post-WWII periods. The evidence is not quite as conclusive for the inter-war years in that, although the spread coefficient estimates are negative at all horizons, the level of significance is only reasonably small for horizons between five and ten months. This finding nevertheless accords well with the evidence from the US.

References

Capie, F H and T C Mills (1991), “Money and business cycles in the US and the UK, 1870 to 1913”, Manchester School 59: 38-56.

Gerlach, S and R Stuart (2018), “The slope of the term structure and recessions: the pre-Fed evidence, 1857-1913”, CEPR Discussion Paper 13013.

Mills, T C, F H Capie and C A E Goodhart (2018), “The Slope of the Term Structure and Recessions: Evidence from the UK, 1822 – 2016”, CEPR Discussion Paper 13159.

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