38 results
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2. An alternative characterization of top trading cycles.
- Author
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Morrill, Thayer
- Subjects
STRATEGIC planning ,ALGORITHMS ,ECONOMIC efficiency ,INDEPENDENCE (Mathematics) ,MONOTONIC functions ,BUSINESS cycles - Abstract
This paper introduces two new characterizations of the top trading cycles algorithm. The key to our characterizations is a new condition, independence of irrelevant rankings (IIR). Intuitively, a mechanism satisfies IIR if whenever an agent's ranking at an object is irrelevant to her assignment, then it is irrelevant to the assignment of all agents. We demonstrate that a mechanism is Pareto efficient, strategy-proof, IIR, and satisfies mutual best if and only if it is top trading cycles. This provides a new insight into what distinguishes top trading cycles from all other efficient and strategy-proof assignment mechanisms. We provide a second characterization in terms of weak Maskin monotonicity. A mechanism satisfies Pareto efficiency, weak Maskin monotonicity, IIR, and mutual best if and only if it is top trading cycles. This allows us to directly compare top trading cycles to known characterizations of the deferred acceptance algorithm in terms of weak Maskin monotonicity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Hours and employment variation in business cycle theory.
- Author
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Kydland, Finn E. and Prescott, Edward C.
- Subjects
BUSINESS cycles ,LABOR productivity ,LABOR economics ,LABOR time - Abstract
Previous business cycle models have made the assumption that all the variation in the labor input is either due to changes in hours per worker or changes in number of workers, but not both. In this paper, both vary. We think this is a better model for estimating the contribution of Solow technology shocks to aggregate fluctuations. We find that about 70% of the variance of U.S. postwar cyclical fluctuations is induced by variations in the Solow technology parameter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Business cycle amplification with heterogeneous expectations.
- Author
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Branch, William and McGough, Bruce
- Subjects
BUSINESS cycles ,STOCHASTIC models ,RATIONAL expectations (Economic theory) ,PARSIMONIOUS models ,ECONOMIC forecasting ,ECONOMIC equilibrium ,ECONOMIC statistics - Abstract
This paper studies the implications for business cycle dynamics of heterogeneous expectations in a stochastic growth model. The assumption of homogeneous, rational expectations is replaced with a heterogeneous expectations model where a fraction of agents hold rational expectations and the remaining fraction adopt parsimonious forecasting models that are, in equilibrium, optimal within a restricted class. Our approach nests the literature on rational expectations in business cycle models with a recent approach based on adaptive learning. We demonstrate that (i.) heterogeneous expectations can lead to substantial improvement in the internal propagation of equilibrium business cycle models and (ii.) the internal propagation depends on the degree of heterogeneity. A calibrated model with heterogeneity provides a closer fit to business cycle data than its representative agent, rational expectations counterpart. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Why have business cycle fluctuations become less volatile?
- Author
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Arias, Andres, Hansen, Gary, and Ohanian, Lee
- Subjects
MARKET volatility ,BUSINESS cycles ,ECONOMIC activity ,INDUSTRIAL productivity ,SOLOW growth model ,MATHEMATICAL models of economic development - Abstract
This paper shows that a standard Real Business Cycle model driven by productivity shocks can successfully account for the 50% decline in cyclical volatility of output, its components, and labor input that has occurred since 1983. The model is successful because the volatility of productivity shocks has also declined significantly over the same time period. We then investigate whether the decline in the volatility of the Solow Residual is due to changes in the volatility of some other shock operating through a channel that is absent in the standard model. We therefore develop a model with variable capacity and labor utilization. We investigate whether government spending shocks, shocks that affect the household’s first order condition for labor, and shocks that affect the household’s first order condition for saving can plausibly account for the change in TFP volatility and in the volatility of output, its components, and labor. We find that none of these shocks are able to do this. This suggests that successfully accounting for the post-1983 decline in business cycle volatility requires a change in the volatility of a productivity-like shock operating within a standard growth model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Collateral and the efficiency of monetary policy.
- Author
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Peiris, M. and Vardoulakis, Alexandros
- Subjects
COLLATERAL security ,MONETARY policy ,BUSINESS cycles ,LOMBARD loans ,PARETO analysis ,ECONOMIC equilibrium ,INTEREST rates - Abstract
This paper argues that in a monetary Real Business Cycle economy where a complete set of nominal contingent claims exist, the requirement to collateralize loans, alone, does not affect the equilibrium allocation when monetary policy is chosen optimally: The Pareto optimal allocation can be supported. A Friedman rule ( r = 0), which would be optimal in the absence of collateral constraints, here is not. At the resulting prices, collateral constraints bind and the allocation is inefficient. However, positive interest rates (through an inflation tax on money balances) support the Pareto optimal allocation when the collateral constraint binds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. The diversity of forecasts from macroeconomic models of the US economy.
- Author
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Wieland, Volker and Wolters, Maik
- Subjects
ECONOMIC forecasting ,MACROECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC models ,ECONOMIC development ,PRICE inflation ,BAYESIAN field theory ,BUSINESS cycles - Abstract
This paper investigates the accuracy and heterogeneity of output growth and inflation forecasts during the current and the four preceding NBER-dated US recessions. We generate forecasts from six different models of the US economy and compare them to professional forecasts from the Federal Reserve's Greenbook and the Survey of Professional Forecasters (SPF). The model parameters and model forecasts are derived from historical data vintages so as to ensure comparability to historical forecasts by professionals. The mean model forecast comes surprisingly close to the mean SPF and Greenbook forecasts in terms of accuracy even though the models only make use of a small number of data series. Model forecasts compare particularly well to professional forecasts at a horizon of three to four quarters and during recoveries. The extent of forecast heterogeneity is similar for model and professional forecasts but varies substantially over time. Thus, forecast heterogeneity constitutes a potentially important source of economic fluctuations. While the particular reasons for diversity in professional forecasts are not observable, the diversity in model forecasts can be traced to different modeling assumptions, information sets and parameter estimates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Monetary policy and heterogeneous expectations.
- Author
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Branch, William and Evans, George
- Subjects
MONETARY policy ,KEYNESIAN economics ,PARSIMONIOUS models ,ECONOMIC forecasting ,ECONOMIC equilibrium ,BUSINESS cycles ,ECONOMIC statistics - Abstract
This paper studies the implications for monetary policy of heterogeneous expectations in a New Keynesian model. The assumption of rational expectations is replaced with parsimonious forecasting models where agents select between predictors that are underparameterized. In a Misspecification Equilibrium agents only select the best-performing statistical models. We demonstrate that, even when monetary policy rules satisfy the Taylor principle by adjusting nominal interest rates more than one for one with inflation, there may exist equilibria with Intrinsic Heterogeneity. Under certain conditions, there may exist multiple misspecification equilibria. We show that these findings have important implications for business cycle dynamics and for the design of monetary policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Symposium: on the role of market belief in economic dynamics, an introduction.
- Author
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Kurz, Mordecai
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,RATIONAL expectations (Economic theory) ,MACROECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC equilibrium ,ECONOMIC forecasting ,BUSINESS cycles ,MARKOV processes - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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10. Market games with asymmetric information: the core.
- Author
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Allen, Beth
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC impact ,BUSINESS cycles ,GAME theory ,MATHEMATICAL models ,RESEARCH methodology - Abstract
This paper concerns cores of economies with asymmetric information. Alternative definitions of the information available to traders in coalitions and the cooperative games they generate are analyzed. An important technical result states that such NTU games in characteristic function form are well defined. Properties of various cores with asymmetric information are examined. Sufficient conditions on information sharing rules are provided for the induced games to be totally balanced or balanced, so that their cores are nonempty. Incentive compatibility issues are considered. Finally, a perspective on this research area is provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Procyclicality and the new Basel Accord - banks’ choice of loan rating system.
- Author
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Catarineu-Rabell, Eva, Jackson, Patricia, and Tsomocos, Dimitrios P.
- Subjects
RATINGS of bank holding companies ,BANKING industry ,RISK ,BUSINESS cycles ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision is proposing to introduce, in 2006, new risk-based requirements for internationally active (and other significant) banks. These will replace the relatively risk-invariant requirements in the current Accord. The new requirements for the largest bank will be based on bank ratings of the probability of default of the borrowers. There is evidence that the choice of loan ratings which are conditional on the point in the economic cycle could lead to sharp increases in capital requirements in recessions. This makes the question of which rating schemes banks will use very important. The paper uses a general equilibrium model of the financial system to explore whether banks would choose to use a countercyclical, procyclical or neutral rating scheme. The results indicate that banks would not choose a stable rating approach, which has important policy implications for the design of the Accord. It makes it important that banks are given incentives to adopt more stable rating schemes. This consideration has been reflected in the Committee's latest proposals, in October 2002. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Business cycles in a two-sector model of endogenous growth.
- Author
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Canton, Erik
- Subjects
BUSINESS cycles ,ENDOGENOUS growth (Economics) - Abstract
This paper analyzes the impact of cyclical volatility on long-term economic growth: does growth increase or decrease with increased cyclical volatility? We construct a stochastic two-sector model of endogenous growth to analyze this question in detail. We will show that economic growth is higher in the presence of business cycles, since people devote more time to learning activities in an uncertain economic environment. Human capital is a hedge against future income uncertainty. Hence, the rate of economic growth will be higher in a stochastic environment. Based on a calibration of the model, we find that economic growth increases by 0.46%-point as a result of observed business cycle variability. When account is taken of the interaction between the model's general equilibrium and the cycle, welfare gains (measured in units of a permanent percentage increase in consumption) from eliminating business cycle volatility are approximately 1.87%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. On two kinds of manipulation for school choice problems.
- Author
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Kesten, Onur
- Subjects
SCHOOL choice ,SOCIAL problems ,SCHOOL districts ,STUDENTS ,STRATEGIC planning ,BUSINESS cycles - Abstract
Many school districts in the US. employ centralized clearing houses to assign students to public schools. An important potential threat against any school choice mechanism is the tendency of schools to circumvent the procedure via two kinds of strategic manipulation: manipulation via capacities and manipulation via pre-arranged matches. This paper studies the extent of the vulnerability of three prominent school choice mechanisms that have been adopted (or, considered for adoption) by some school districts in the US. We find that the highly debated Boston mechanism as well as the top trading cycles mechanism are immune to manipulation via capacities, unlike the student-optimal stable mechanism (SOSM). We show that SOSM is immune to manipulation via capacities if and only if the priority structure satisfies an acyclicity condition proposed by Ergin (Econometrica 70:2489-2497, ). On the other hand, we show that essentially no mechanism is immune to manipulation via pre-arranged matches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The perils of credit booms.
- Author
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Dong, Feng, Miao, Jianjun, and Wang, Pengfei
- Subjects
ECONOMIC equilibrium ,BUSINESS cycles ,ADVERSE selection (Commerce) ,PRODUCTION (Economic theory) ,LIQUIDITY (Economics) - Abstract
We present a dynamic general equilibrium model of production economies with adverse selection in the financial market to study the interaction between funding liquidity and market liquidity and its impact on business cycles. Entrepreneurs can take on short-term collateralized debt and trade long-term assets to finance investment. Funding liquidity can erode market liquidity. High funding liquidity discourages firms from selling their good long-term assets since these good assets have to subsidize lemons when there is information asymmetry. This can cause a liquidity dry-up in the market for long-term assets and even a market breakdown, resulting in a financial crisis. Multiple equilibria can coexist. Credit booms combined with changes in beliefs can cause equilibrium regime shifts, leading to an economic crisis or expansion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. When economic growth is less than exponential.
- Author
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Groth, Christian, Koch, Karl-Josef, and Steger, Thomas
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC indicators ,GROWTH rate ,MATHEMATICAL models ,SIMULATION methods & models ,ECONOMIC models ,STAGNATION (Economics) ,BUSINESS cycles - Abstract
This paper argues that growth theory needs a more general notion of “regularity” than that of exponential growth. We suggest that paths along which the rate of decline of the growth rate is proportional to the growth rate itself deserve attention. This opens up for considering a richer set of parameter combinations than in standard growth models. Moreover, it avoids the usual oversimplistic dichotomy of either exponential growth or stagnation. Allowing zero population growth in three different growth models (the Jones R&D-based model, a learning-by-doing model, and an embodied technical change model) serves as illustration that a continuum of “regular” growth processes fill the whole range between exponential growth and complete stagnation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Remarks on the influence of Edward Prescott.
- Author
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Lucas, Robert
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT ,BUSINESS cycles ,ECONOMIC activity ,ECONOMIC models ,ECONOMIC equilibrium ,ECONOMIC research - Abstract
This article presents the author's perspective on the work of Edward C. Prescott, a pioneer in macroeconomics. He feels the most significant development in the field has been Prescott's real business cycle model and the research it spurred. Now, everyone believes that productivity shocks account for some employment fluctuations. The model has also proven to be much more adaptable than originally thought. Although the model still generates criticism, that was part of Prescott's intention, as it was intended to instigate further research.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Market and underground activities in a two-sector dynamic equilibrium model.
- Author
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Busato, Francesco and Chiarini, Bruno
- Subjects
ECONOMIC equilibrium ,INFORMAL sector ,TAXATION ,INCOME ,LABOR market ,BUSINESS cycles - Abstract
Summary. In this paper a two sector dynamic general equilibrium model is developed in order to evaluate the implications of the underground economy from a business cycle perspective. There are three main results. First, introducing an underground sector improves the fit of the model to the data, especially along several important labor market dimensions. Second, the model produces substantial internal propagation of temporary shocks. Third, it is shown that underground activities offer risk sharing opportunities by allowing households to smooth income through a proper labor allocation between the two sectors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Reallocation with priorities and minimal envy mechanisms.
- Author
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Combe, Julien
- Subjects
ENVY ,SCHOOL choice ,BUSINESS cycles ,BASE pairs - Abstract
We investigate the problem of reallocation with priorities where one has to assign objects or positions to individuals. Agents can have an initial ownership over an object. Each object has a priority ordering over the agents. In this framework, there is no mechanism that is both individually rational (IR) and stable, i.e. has no blocking pairs. Given this impossibility, an alternative approach is to compare mechanisms based on the blocking pairs they generate. A mechanism has minimal envy within a set of mechanisms if there is no other mechanism in the set that always leads to a set of blocking pairs included in the one of the former mechanism. Our main result shows that the modified Deferred Acceptance mechanism (Guillen and Kesten in Int Econ Rev 53(3):1027–1046, 2012), is a minimal envy mechanism in the set of IR and strategy-proof mechanisms. We also show that an extension of the Top Trading Cycle (Karakaya et al. in J Econ Theory 184:104948, 2019) mechanism is a minimal envy mechanism in the set of IR, strategy-proof and Pareto-efficient mechanisms. These two results extend the existing ones in school choice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Agency costs and business cycles.
- Author
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Carlstrom, Charles T. and Fuerst, Timothy S.
- Subjects
ENDOGENOUS growth (Economics) ,PRODUCTION (Economic theory) ,INVESTMENTS ,BUSINESS cycles ,MACROECONOMICS - Abstract
Summary. This paper develops a model with endogenous agency costs that is otherwise quite similar to the canonical real business cycle model. The traditional assumption in the literature is that these agency costs arise in the production of investment goods. In contrast, this paper assumes that these costs are all encompassing in the sense that they arise in the production of aggregate output. The paper explores both the importance of the investment vs. output assumption for business cycle dynamics, and the conditions under which these agency models can deliver amplification and/or persistence. The paper has two principal conclusions. First, in terms of amplification and propagation, the output model performs worse than does the investment model. This arises because a variable distortion in the investment market has more of an impact than a comparable distortion in the output market. Second, in this model with optimal consumption choice by entrepreneurs, there is a clear tension between amplification and persistence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Optimal growth and cycles in overlapping generations models.
- Author
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Michel, Philippe and Venditti, Alain
- Subjects
UTILITY functions ,ECONOMIC development ,ALTRUISM ,BUSINESS cycles ,PRODUCTION functions (Economic theory) - Abstract
This paper investigates the dynamical properties of optimal paths in one-sector overlapping generations models without assuming that the utility function of the representative agent is separable. When the utility function is separable, the optimal growth paths monotonically converges toward the modified golden rule steady state. In the non-separable case, we show that the optimal growth path may be oscillating and optimal two-period cycles may exist. Applying these results to the model with altruism, we show that the condition of operative bequest is fully compatible with endogeneous fluctuations provided that the discount factor is close enough to one. All our results are illustrated using Cobb-Douglas utility and production functions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Credit search and credit cycles.
- Author
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Dong, Feng, Wang, Pengfei, and Wen, Yi
- Subjects
SUPPLY & demand ,BANK loans ,BANK reserves ,BUSINESS cycles ,RATE of return - Abstract
The supply and demand of credit are not always well aligned, as is reflected in the countercyclical excess reserve-to-deposit ratio and interest spread between the lending rate and the deposit rate. We develop a search-based theory of credit allocations to explain the cyclical fluctuations in both bank reserves and interest spread. We show that search frictions in the credit market can naturally explain the countercyclical bank reserves and interest spread, as well as generate endogenous business cycles driven primarily by the cyclical utilization rate of credit resources, as long conjectured by the Austrian school of the business cycle. In particular, we show that credit search can lead to endogenous local increasing returns to scale and variable capital utilization in a model with constant returns to scale production technology and matching functions, thus providing a microfoundation for the indeterminacy literature of Benhabib and Farmer (J Econ Theory 63(1):19-41, ) and Wen (J Econ Theory 81(1):7-36, ). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Diverse beliefs and time variability of risk premia.
- Author
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Kurz, Mordecai and Motolese, Maurizio
- Subjects
RISK premiums ,CAPITAL assets pricing model ,BUSINESS cycles ,STOCK exchanges ,EMPIRICAL research ,TREASURY bills ,FEDERAL funds market (U.S.) - Abstract
Why do risk premia vary over time? We examine this problem theoretically and empirically by studying the effect of market belief on risk premia. Individual belief is taken as a fundamental primitive state variable. Market belief is observable; it is central to the empirical evaluation and we show how to measure it. Our asset pricing model is familiar from the noisy REE literature but we adapt it to an economy with diverse beliefs. We derive equilibrium asset prices and implied risk premium. Our approach permits a closed form solution of prices; hence we trace the exact effect of market belief on the time variability of asset prices and risk premia. We test empirically the theoretical conclusions. Our main result is that, above the effect of business cycles on risk premia, fluctuations in market belief have significant independent effect on the time variability of risk premia. We study the premia on long positions in Federal Funds Futures, 3- and 6-month Treasury Bills (T-Bills). The annual mean risk premium on holding such assets for 1-12 months is about 40-60 basis points and we find that, on average, the component of market belief in the risk premium exceeds 50% of the mean. Since time variability of market belief is large, this component frequently exceeds 50% of the mean premium. This component is larger the shorter is the holding period of an asset and it dominates the premium for very short holding returns of less than 2 months. As to the structure of the premium we show that when the market holds abnormally favorable belief about the future payoff of an asset the market views the long position as less risky hence the risk premium on that asset declines. More generally, periods of market optimism (i.e. 'bull' markets) are shown to be periods when the market risk premium is low while in periods of pessimism (i.e. 'bear' markets) the market's risk premium is high. Fluctuations in risk premia are thus inversely related to the degree of market optimism about future prospects of asset payoffs. This effect is strong and economically very significant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Profit maximization and supermodular technology.
- Author
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Chambers, Christopher P. and Echenique, Federico
- Subjects
PROFIT maximization ,REVENUE ,ECONOMIC demand ,TECHNOLOGY & economics ,FACTORS of production ,CONSUMER behavior ,MONOTONIC functions ,UTILITY functions ,BUSINESS cycles - Abstract
A dataset is a list of observed factor inputs and prices for a technology; profits and production levels are unobserved. We obtain necessary and sufficient conditions for a dataset to be consistent with profit maximization under a monotone and concave revenue based on the notion of cyclic monotonicity. Our result implies that monotonicity and concavity cannot be tested, and that one cannot decide if a firm is competitive based on factor demands. We also introduce a condition, cyclic supermodularity, which is both necessary and sufficient for data to be consistent with a supermodular technology. Cyclic supermodularity provides a test for complementarity of production factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. On learning equilibria.
- Author
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Tuinstra, Jan and Wagener, Florian
- Subjects
BUSINESS cycles ,PRICE inflation ,ECONOMIC models ,HOUSEHOLDS ,REGRESSION analysis ,PRICES ,ESTIMATION theory - Abstract
Bullard (1994) and Schönhofer (1999) show that endogenous business cycles may emerge in an inflationary overlapping generations model where households predict future inflation rates by running a least squares regression on prices. We show that given the same beliefs but under an alternative, more natural, estimation procedure based upon inflation rates the monetary steady state will be globally stable for a large set of savings functions. We also study an evolutionary competition between the two estimation procedures. Although the dynamics are stabilized for a large set of parameter values, endogenous business cycles may still emerge in this heterogeneous beliefs framework. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Labor adjustment costs and complex eigenvalues.
- Author
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Fairise, Xavier and Fève, Patrick
- Subjects
SET theory ,OSCILLATIONS ,BUSINESS cycles ,EIGENVALUES ,LABOR costs ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Aggregate variables display both persistence and damped oscillations in response to temporary external shocks. The standard real business cycles (RBC) model cannot explain these patterns, because its stable eigenvalues are positive and real. We demonstrate that this model with labor adjustment costs can yield complex eigenvalues. However, numerical experiments suggest that the model cannot display distinguishable damped oscillations of aggregate variables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Endogenous growth cycles in an overlapping generations model with investment gestation lags.
- Author
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Kitagawa, Akiomi and Shibata, Akihisa
- Subjects
ENDOGENOUS growth (Economics) ,BUSINESS cycles ,INVESTMENTS ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC models ,STAGNATION (Economics) - Abstract
A simple overlapping generations model with investment gestation lags is constructed. The model shows that, if the technology is of the AK type with capital-deepening externalities, the existence of investment gestation lags always generates permanent cyclical fluctuations in the economic growth rate. The mean growth rate is shown to be positive if the external effect is strong. The model also shows that, if the production technology takes the Cobb-Douglas form, there exists a unique steady state in which the economy exhibits neither cyclical fluctuations nor long-run growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Indeterminacy in a small open economy with endogenous labor supply.
- Author
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Meng, Qinglai and Velasco, Andrés
- Subjects
LABOR economics ,BUSINESS cycles ,ENDOGENOUS growth (Economics) ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,EXTERNALITIES ,LABOR supply ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
We establish conditions under which indeterminacy can occur in a small open economy business cycle model with endogenous labor supply. Indeterminacy requires small externalities in technologies with social constant returns to scale, independently of the intertemporal elasticities in both consumption and labor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Uninsured idiosyncratic risk, liquidity constraints and aggregate fluctuations.
- Author
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Díaz-Giménez, Javier
- Subjects
LIQUIDITY (Economics) ,FINANCE ,ECONOMICS ,RISK ,BUSINESS cycles ,INSURANCE ,ECONOMETRIC models ,TECHNOLOGY ,INDUSTRIAL productivity - Abstract
I study the role played by uninsured idiosyncratic risk and liquidity constraints in the propagation of aggregate fluctuations. To this purpose, I compare the aggregate fluctuations of two model economies that differ in their insurance technologies only. In one of these model economies liquidity constrained households vary their holdings of a nominally denominated asset in order to buffer an uninsured idiosyncratic shock to their individual production opportunities. In the other economy every idiosyncratic component of risk can be costlessly insured. I find that the limited insurance technology implies fluctuations in output that are 20% larger, fluctuations in hours relative to output that are 9% larger, fluctuations in consumption relative to output that are 18% smaller, and a correlation of hours and productivity that is 15% smaller than those that obtain under the full insurance technology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
29. The business cycle with nominal contracts.
- Author
-
Jang-Ok Cho and Cooley, Thomas F.
- Subjects
BUSINESS cycles ,CONTRACTS ,WAGES ,MARKET volatility ,ECONOMIC equilibrium ,NEOCLASSICAL school of economics - Abstract
In this paper we study the quantitative implications of nominal wage contracts for business cycle fluctuations. We address this issue using a model economy based on the neoclassical growth model supplemented by the assumption that cash is needed to purchase goods. We consider a variation of the standard recursive competitive equilibrium concept that is intended to capture the important features of wage contracting. We use this equilibrium construct to address three issues. First, we consider whether monetary shocks, propagated by nominal contracts, constitute a viable alternative to technology shocks as a source of aggregate fluctuations. Our results suggest that, while monetary shocks and nominal rigidities succeed in causing output volatility of the required magnitude, the resulting data have properties that are inconsistent with several key features of U.S. data. Second, we consider how the behavior of the economy varies with contract length. We find that the volatility induced by both monetary and technology shocks increases sharply with contract length. Finally we consider how much rigidity would be necessary to match the volatility of U.S. output. We find that only a very small amount of rigidity would be necessary to cause output volatility of the magnitude observed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. On endowments and indivisibility: partial ownership in the Shapley–Scarf model.
- Author
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Harless, Patrick and Phan, William
- Subjects
ENDOWMENTS ,BUSINESS cycles ,WINDSTORMS - Abstract
We introduce a parameterized measure of partial ownership, the α -endowment lower bound, appropriate to probabilistic allocation. Strikingly, among all convex combinations of efficient and group strategy-proof rules, only Gale's Top Trading Cycles is sd efficient and meets a positive α -endowment lower bound (Theorem 2); for efficiency, partial ownership must in fact be complete. We also characterize the rules meeting each α -endowment lower bound (Theorem 1). For each bound, the family is a semilattice ordered by strength of ownership rights. It includes rules where agents' partial ownership lower bounds are met exactly, rules conferring stronger ownership rights, and the full endowments of TTC. This illustrates the trade-off between sd efficiency and flexible choice of ownership rights. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Search frictions and labor market dynamics in a real business cycle model with undeclared work.
- Author
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Ciccarone, Giuseppe, Giuli, Francesco, and Marchetti, Enrico
- Subjects
LABOR market ,BUSINESS cycles ,WAGES ,UNITED States economy ,MARKET volatility ,TAX evasion - Abstract
We study the effects of undeclared work (UDW) on labor market dynamics in a real business cycle (RBC) model with search and matching frictions in the labor market. Distinction is made between the wages paid and the hours worked in regular and in undeclared types of activity. Calibrating the model on the US economy, we show that a greater size of UDW implies lower average employment, higher volatility of employment and lower volatility of regular wages. These volatilities are affected by the steady-state ratio between the minimum value of the regular wage that can be accepted by a worker and the maximum value that can be paid by a firm in the Nash bargaining process, which occurs when a labor match is realized. The greater the ratio, the higher the volatility of employment and the lower the volatility of wages. We demonstrate that, due to a social stigma attached to UDW, an increase in undeclared hours raises this ratio by reducing the numerator less than the denominator. This suggests that the introduction of UDW may improve the ability of RBC models to match the empirical volatilities of labor market variables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. A Q-theory model with lumpy investment.
- Author
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Miao, Jianjun and Wang, Pengfei
- Subjects
INVESTMENTS ,MICROECONOMICS ,STOCHASTIC analysis ,COMPUTABLE general equilibrium models ,NONLINEAR analysis ,COST analysis - Abstract
We present an analytically tractable dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model that incorporates micro-level fixed and convex adjustment costs. We provide an explicit characterization of equilibrium dynamics by a system of nonlinear stochastic difference equations. We provide general conditions under which our model features investment lumpiness at the microeconomic level, but aggregate dynamics are isomorphic to those in a Q-theory model without fixed costs. This theoretical result is independent of the specification of the fixed cost distribution and also holds true when firms face persistent idiosyncratic productivity shocks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Expectational coordination in simple economic contexts.
- Author
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Guesnerie, Roger and Jara-Moroni, Pedro
- Subjects
ECONOMIC models ,RATIONAL expectations (Economic theory) ,ECONOMIC equilibrium ,BUSINESS cycles ,ECONOMIC stabilization ,MATHEMATICAL models ,NUMERICAL analysis - Abstract
We consider an economic model that features (1) a continuum of agents and (2) an aggregate state of the world over which agents have an infinitesimal influence. We first review the connections between the 'eductive' viewpoint on expectational stability and standard game-theoretical rationalizability concepts. The 'eductive' reasoning selects different plausible beliefs that are a priori, and possibly a posteriori, 'diverse'. Such beliefs are associated with the sets of 'Cobweb tâtonnement' outcomes, 'Rationalizable States' and 'Point-Rationalizable States' (the latter two being shown to be convex). In the case where our model displays strategic complementarities, unsurprisingly, all our 'eductive' criteria support similar conclusions, particularly when the equilibrium is unique. With strategic substitutabilities, the success of expectational coordination, in the case where a unique equilibrium does exists, relates with the absence of cycles of order 2 of the 'Cobweb' mapping: in this case, full expectational coordination would be achieved. However, when cycles of order 2 do exist, our different criteria predict larger sets of outcomes, although all tied with cycles. Under differentiability assumptions, the Poincaré-Hopf method leads to other global stability results. At the local level, the different criteria under scrutiny can be adapted. They lead to the same expectational stability conclusions, only when there are local strategic complementarities or strategic substitutabilities. However, for the local stability analysis, it is demonstrated that the stochastic character of expectations can most often be forgotten. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Volatility in the knowledge economy.
- Author
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Chichilnisky, Graciela and Gorbachev, Olga
- Subjects
MARKET volatility ,HEDGING (Finance) ,FINANCIAL markets ,ECONOMIC equilibrium ,BUSINESS cycles ,RATE of return - Abstract
Summary. We seek to explain the economic volatility of the last 6 years, in particular the rapid expansion and contraction of the knowledge sectors. Our hypothesis is that these sectors amplify the business cycle due to their increasing returns to scale, growing faster than others in an upswing and contracting faster in a downswing. To test this hypothesis we postulate a general equilibrium model with two sectors: one with increasing returns that are external to the firm and endogenously determined--the knowledge sector--and the other with constant returns to scale. We introduce a new measure of volatility of output, a ‘real beta’, and derive a ‘resolving’ equation, from which we prove that the increasing return sectors exhibit more volatility then other sectors. We validate the main results on US macro economic data of real GDP by industry (2-3 digits SIC codes) of the 1977-2001 period, and provide policy conclusions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Optimal debt contracts and moral hazard along the business cycle.
- Author
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Reichlin, Pietro and Siconolfi, Paolo
- Subjects
LOANS ,MONEYLENDERS ,PARETO optimum ,BUSINESS cycles ,MORAL hazard ,ADVERSE selection (Insurance) - Abstract
Summary. We analyze the Pareto optimal contracts between lenders and borrowers in a model with asymmetric information. The model generalizes the Rothschild-Stiglitz pure adverse selection problem by including moral hazard. Entrepreneurs with unequal “abilities” borrow to finance alternative investment projects which differ in degree of risk and productivity. We determine the endogenous distribution of projects as functions of the amount of loanable funds, when lenders have no information about borrowers’ ability and technological choices. Then, we embed these results in a dynamic competitive economy and show that the average quality of the selected projects in equilibrium may be high in recessions and low in booms. This phenomenon may generate (a) multiple steady states, (b) a smaller impact of exogenous shocks on output relative to the full information case, (c) endogenous fluctuations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Indeterminacy and cycles in two-sector discrete-time model.
- Author
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Benhabib, Jess, Nishimura, Kazuo, and Venditti, Alain
- Subjects
EXTERNALITIES ,STAGNATION (Economics) ,BUSINESS cycles ,ECONOMIC models ,ECONOMIES of scale ,ECONOMIC equilibrium ,OVERHEAD costs ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
We consider a discrete-time two-sector Cobb-Douglas economy with positive sector specific external effects. We show that indeterminacy of steady states and cycles can easily arise with constant or decreasing social returns to scale, and very small market imperfections. This is in sharp contrast with most of the contributions in the literature in which increasing social returns are required to generate indeterminacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Asymmetric information, financial intermediation, and business cycles
- Author
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Cooley, Thomas F. and Nam, Kwanghee
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Business cycles in a two-sector model of endogenous growth
- Author
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E.J.F. Canton
- Subjects
Macroeconomics ,Economics and Econometrics ,Endogenous growth theory ,General equilibrium theory ,media_common.quotation_subject ,jel:E32 ,ComputingMilieux_LEGALASPECTSOFCOMPUTING ,Monetary economics ,Human capital ,volatility ,business cycles ,growth models ,savings ,jel:J24 ,jel:O41 ,Business cycle ,Economics ,Sector model ,Volatility (finance) ,Welfare ,Public finance ,media_common - Abstract
This paper analyzes the impact of cyclical volatility on long-term economic growth: does growth increase or decrease with increased cyclical volatility? We construct a stochastic two-sector model of endogenous growth to analyze this question in detail. We will show that economic growth is higher in the presence of business cycles, since people devote more time to learning activities in an uncertain economic environment. Human capital is a hedge against future income uncertainty. Hence, the rate of economic growth will be higher in a stochastic environment. Based on a calibration of the model, we find that economic growth increases by 0.46%-point as a result of observed business cycle variability. When account is taken of the interaction between the model's general equilibrium and the cycle, welfare gains (measured in units of a permanent percentage increase in consumption) from eliminating business cycle volatility are approximately 1.87%.
- Published
- 2002
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