This paper develops a new financial stress measure (Cleveland Financial Stress Index, CFSI) that considers the supervisory objective of identifying risks to the stability of the financial system.
This paper develops a financial stress index for the United States, the CFSI, which provides a continuous signal of financial stress and broad coverage of the areas that could indicate it.
With the focus of financial reform placed on reducing the risks associated with being "too big to fail," it is the nation’s largest banks that have been subject to the most scrutiny.
Falling home and financial asset prices have combined to weaken the average household’s balance sheet, and this has helped to slow down the current recovery.
The most frequently cited measures of inflation expectations, from TIPS-derived indicators to survey-based estimates like Blue Chip forecasts, have some inherent limitations when it comes to applying them to questions of monetary policy.