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Ian Christensen
Ian Christensen
Assistant Chief
Bank of Canada
234 Wellington Street
Ottawa, ON K1A 0G9

Ian Christensen

Assistant Chief

About Ian Christensen

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Bank of Canada publications

  1. Bank Leverage Regulation and Macroeconomic Dynamics

    Working Paper 2011-32 - Ian Christensen, Césaire Meh, Kevin Moran

    This paper assesses the merits of countercyclical bank balance sheet regulation for the stabilization of financial and economic cycles and examines its interaction with monetary policy.

    Topic: Economic models; Financial Institutions; Financial system regulation and policies; Monetary policy framework; Transmission of monetary policy
  2. Mortgage Debt and Procyclicality in the Housing Market

    Bank of Canada Review Article: Bank of Canada Review - Summer 2011 - Ian Christensen

    This article focuses on the role that loans backed by housing collateral play in amplifying housing booms and, more generally, procyclicality in the housing market. The author uses a model developed to include borrower and lender households, as well as a housing market, to examine the impact that altering the loan-to-value ratio (either permanently or countercyclically) might have on the volatility of house prices and mortgage debt.

    Topic: Economic models; Financial system regulation and policies; Market structure and pricing
  3. Consumption, Housing Collateral, and the Canadian Business Cycle

    Using Bayesian methods, we estimate a small open economy model in which consumers face limits to credit determined by the value of their housing stock. The purpose of this paper is to quantify the role of collateralized household debt in the Canadian business cycle.

    Topic: Business fluctuations and cycles; Credit and credit aggregates; Transmission of monetary policy
  4. Modelling Financial Channels for Monetary Policy Analysis

    The Bank of Canada considers a wide range of information and analysis before making a monetary policy decision and uses carefully articulated models to produce economic projections and to examine alternative scenarios. This article describes an ongoing research agenda at the Bank to develop models in which financial variables play an active role in the transmission of monetary policy actions to economic activity. Such models can help to analyze information from the financial side of the economy and to provide an overall view of the implications of financial developments for the current economic outlook. The authors also explain how this research can help address other issues relevant to the objectives of monetary policy, including how asset-price movements should be taken into account in the monetary policy framework.

    Topic: Credit and credit aggregates; Economic models; Transmission of monetary policy
  5. Monetary Policy in an Estimated DSGE Model with a Financial Accelerator

    Working Paper 2006-9 - Ian Christensen, Ali Dib

    The authors estimate a sticky-price dynamic stochastic general-equilibrium model with a financial accelerator, à la Bernanke, Gertler, and Gilchrist (1999), to assess the importance of financial frictions in the amplification and propagation of the effects of transitory shocks.

    Topic: Business fluctuations and cycles; Econometric and statistical methods; Economic models
  6. Real Return Bonds: Monetary Policy Credibility and Short-Term Inflation Forecasting

    The break-even inflation rate (BEIR) is calculated by comparing the yields on conventional and Real Return Bonds. Defined as the average rate of inflation that equates the expected returns on these two bonds, the BEIR has the potential to contain useful information about long-run inflation expectations. Yet the BEIR has been higher, on average, and more variable than survey measures of inflation expectations, which may be explained by the effects of premiums and distortions embedded in the BEIR. Because of the difficulty in accounting for these distortions, the BEIR should not be given a large weight as a measure of long-run inflation expectations at this time. However, as the Real Return Bond market continues to develop, the BEIR should become a more useful indicator of inflation expectations. At present, it demonstrates no clear advantage over survey measures and even past inflation rates in forecasting near-term inflation.

    Topic: Inflation and prices; Interest rates; Market structure and pricing
  7. Real Return Bonds, Inflation Expectations, and the Break-Even Inflation Rate

    According to the Fisher hypothesis, the gap between Canadian nominal and Real Return Bond yields (or break-even inflation rate) should be a good measure of inflation expectations.

    Topic: Inflation and prices; Interest rates; Market structure and pricing
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Education

  • M.A., University of Victoria (1998)
  • B.A., McGill University (1996)

Research Interests

  • Monetary theory and policy
  • Macroeconomics
  • Business cycle fluctuations

Publications

Refereed Journals

  • "The Financial Accelerator in an Estimated New Keynesian Model",
    (with Ali Dib), Review of Economic Dynamics, Vol. 11, No.1, p.155-178 (January 2008).
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