Effects of supply and demand disturbances on real commodity prices: the US, UK and Japanese experience

Using forty-one years of monthly data, this paper assesses the impact of economy-wide supply and demand shocks on commodity prices in three of the world?s major economies. Utilising a small theoretical macro model, empirical results support the hypothesis that the relationship between real commodity...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fraser, P., MacDonald, Garry, Bloch, Harry
Format: Working Paper
Published: School of Economics and Finance, Curtin Business School 2005
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/20900
_version_ 1848750439528398848
author Fraser, P.
MacDonald, Garry
Bloch, Harry
author_facet Fraser, P.
MacDonald, Garry
Bloch, Harry
author_sort Fraser, P.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Using forty-one years of monthly data, this paper assesses the impact of economy-wide supply and demand shocks on commodity prices in three of the world?s major economies. Utilising a small theoretical macro model, empirical results support the hypothesis that the relationship between real commodity prices and inflation can be either positive or negative depending on the relative importance of supply and demand shocks in the national economy. Our results also show that differences occur across economies with the UK commodity returns registering more sensitivity to demand shocks than those of US and Japanese markets. Supply and demand components of commodity prices have also varied over time and across economies, suggesting that commodity markets are not fully globally integrated but are highly sensitive to national influences.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T07:36:51Z
format Working Paper
id curtin-20.500.11937-20900
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:36:51Z
publishDate 2005
publisher School of Economics and Finance, Curtin Business School
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-209002017-01-30T12:21:55Z Effects of supply and demand disturbances on real commodity prices: the US, UK and Japanese experience Fraser, P. MacDonald, Garry Bloch, Harry Using forty-one years of monthly data, this paper assesses the impact of economy-wide supply and demand shocks on commodity prices in three of the world?s major economies. Utilising a small theoretical macro model, empirical results support the hypothesis that the relationship between real commodity prices and inflation can be either positive or negative depending on the relative importance of supply and demand shocks in the national economy. Our results also show that differences occur across economies with the UK commodity returns registering more sensitivity to demand shocks than those of US and Japanese markets. Supply and demand components of commodity prices have also varied over time and across economies, suggesting that commodity markets are not fully globally integrated but are highly sensitive to national influences. 2005 Working Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/20900 School of Economics and Finance, Curtin Business School fulltext
spellingShingle Fraser, P.
MacDonald, Garry
Bloch, Harry
Effects of supply and demand disturbances on real commodity prices: the US, UK and Japanese experience
title Effects of supply and demand disturbances on real commodity prices: the US, UK and Japanese experience
title_full Effects of supply and demand disturbances on real commodity prices: the US, UK and Japanese experience
title_fullStr Effects of supply and demand disturbances on real commodity prices: the US, UK and Japanese experience
title_full_unstemmed Effects of supply and demand disturbances on real commodity prices: the US, UK and Japanese experience
title_short Effects of supply and demand disturbances on real commodity prices: the US, UK and Japanese experience
title_sort effects of supply and demand disturbances on real commodity prices: the us, uk and japanese experience
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/20900