14 results on '"Wouters, Rafaël"'
Search Results
2. Slow Recoveries: A Structural Interpretation
- Author
-
GALÍ, JORDI, SMETS, FRANK, and WOUTERS, RAFAEL
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Unemployment in an Estimated New Keynesian Model
- Author
-
Galí, Jordi, Smets, Frank, and Wouters, Rafael
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Shocks and Frictions in US Business Cycles: A Bayesian DSGE Approach
- Author
-
Smets, Frank and Wouters, Rafael
- Published
- 2007
5. [On the Fit of New Keynesian Models]: Rejoinder
- Author
-
Negro, Marco Del, Schorfheide, Frank, Smets, Frank, and Wouters, Rafael
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Bayesian New Neoclassical Synthesis (NNS) Models: Modern Tools for Central Banks
- Author
-
Smets, Frank and Wouters, Rafael
- Published
- 2005
7. Essays on Business Cycles and Monetary Policy
- Author
-
Kollmann, Robert, Wouters, Rafaël, Gassner, Marjorie, Lenza, Michèle, Oikonomou, Rigas, Parenti, Mathieu, Pinchetti, Marco Luca, Kollmann, Robert, Wouters, Rafaël, Gassner, Marjorie, Lenza, Michèle, Oikonomou, Rigas, Parenti, Mathieu, and Pinchetti, Marco Luca
- Abstract
This thesis explores some different dimensions of business cycle analysis and monetary policy,in closed and open economies. In the first chapter, I develop a model to analyze the roleof research and development in the US business cycle, and its ability to produce macroeconomicfluctuations by generating expectations of future productivity gains. In the secondchapter, I empirically investigate how changes in central bank transparency affects financialmarkets response to central bank announcements in the United Kingdom. Finally, in thethird chapter, I analyze some heterogeneities in the international spillovers of central bankannouncements, focusing on the behavior of exchange rates and international capital flows.The first chapter studies the role of R&D-based innovation within the US business cycle. Thechapter builds on the idea that temporary business cycle frequency contractions can result inprolonged medium-run slowdowns, if an economy’s technological growth is generated by asector of profit-maximizing innovators. In order to analyse the business cycle spillovers oninnovation activity, this chapter analyzes the contribution of R&D-based innovation to USbusiness cycle dynamics combining techniques from the empirical and theoretical literature.First, using a Bayesian VAR identified with a Cholesky recursive formulation, the papershows that innovation shocks are generally inflationary and generate rises in hours worked.Second, the paper introduces a medium-scale New-Keynesian model of creative destructionthat can rationalize these facts. In the model, a sector of profit-maximizing innovators investsin R&D and endogenously generates productivity gains, ultimately determining theeconomy’s growth rate. The estimated responses to innovation shocks are characterized bypowerful wealth effects that offset the contractionary spillovers on the labour market conventionally associated with productivity increases. The estimation results suggest that thebulk of the productivity s, Doctorat en Sciences économiques et de gestion, info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
- Published
- 2020
8. Essays on Inflation: Expectations, Forecasting and Markups
- Author
-
Weil, Philippe, Gassner, Marjorie, Magerman, Glenn, Wouters, Rafaël, Altavilla, Carlo, Lenza, Michèle, Capolongo, Angela, Weil, Philippe, Gassner, Marjorie, Magerman, Glenn, Wouters, Rafaël, Altavilla, Carlo, Lenza, Michèle, and Capolongo, Angela
- Abstract
This manuscript is composed of three chapters.In the first chapter, I analyze the impact of key European Central Bank’s unconventional monetary policy announcements on inflation expectations, measured by Euro Area five-year Inflation Linked Swap rates five years ahead, since the aftermath of the crisis. I control for market liquidity and uncertainty measures, change in oil price shock and macroeconomic news. The results show that the impact of the European Central Bank’s announcements has been positive during the period under observation. Along the line of the expansionary monetary policy measures implemented, the agents have been revising upwards their long term inflation expectations. This means that the unconventional monetary policy measures were effective. In the second chapter, co-authored with Claudia Pacella, we construct a Bayesian vector autoregressive model with three layers of information: the key drivers of inflation, cross-country dynamic interactions, and country-specific variables. The model provides good forecasting accuracy with respect to the popular benchmarks used in the literature. We perform a step-by-step analysis to shed light on which layer of information is more crucial for accurately forecasting euro area inflation. Our empirical analysis reveals the importance of including the key drivers of inflation and taking into account the multi-country dimension of the euro area. The results show that the complete model performs better overall in forecasting inflation excluding energy and unprocessed food over the medium-term. We use the model to establish stylized facts on the euro area and cross-country heterogeneity over the business cycle. In the third chapter, using confidential firm-level data from the National Bank of Belgium, I document the heterogeneous response of firms’ markups to the 2008 financial crisis. Overall, markups increased in the aftermath of the crisis and the effect was larger for highly financially constrained firms. I sho, Doctorat en Sciences économiques et de gestion, info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
- Published
- 2020
9. Topics in macroeconomics and finance
- Author
-
Weil, Philippe, Gassner, Marjorie, Veredas, David, Konieczny, Jurek, Kollmann, Robert, Giannone, Domenico, Wouters, Rafaël, Raciborski, Rafal, Weil, Philippe, Gassner, Marjorie, Veredas, David, Konieczny, Jurek, Kollmann, Robert, Giannone, Domenico, Wouters, Rafaël, and Raciborski, Rafal
- Abstract
The thesis consists of four chapters. The introductory chapter clarifies different notions of rationality used by economists and gives a summary of the remainder of the thesis. Chapter 2 proposes an explanation for the common empirical observation of the coexistence of infrequently-changing regular price ceilings and promotion-like price patterns. The results derive from enriching an otherwise standard, albeit stylized, general equilibrium model with two elements. First, the consumer-producer interaction is modeled in the spirit of the price dispersion literature, by introducing oligopolistic markets, consumer search costs and heterogeneity. Second, consumers are assumed to be boundedly-rational: In order to incorporate new information about the general price level, they have to incur a small cognitive cost. The decision whether to re-optimize or act according to the obsolete knowledge about prices is itself a result of optimization. It is shown that in this economy, individual retail prices are capped below the monopoly price, but are otherwise flexible. Moreover, they have the following three properties: 1) An individual price has a positive probability of being equal to the ceiling. 2) Prices have a tendency to fall below the ceiling and then be reset back to the cap value. 3) The ceiling remains constant for extended time intervals even when the mean rate of inflation is positive. Properties 1) and 2) can be associated with promotions and properties 1) and 3) imply the emergence of nominal price rigidity. The results do not rely on any type of direct costs of price adjustment. Instead, price stickiness derives from frictions on the consumers’ side of the market, in line with the results of several managerial surveys. It is shown that the developed theory, compared to the classic menu costs-based approach, does better in matching the stylized facts about the reaction of individual prices to inflation. In terms of quantitative assessment, the model, when calibrate, Doctorat en Sciences économiques et de gestion, info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
- Published
- 2014
10. Combining structural and reduced-form models for macroeconomic forecasting and policy analysis
- Author
-
Giannone, Domenico, Weil, Philippe, Gassner, Marjorie, Wouters, Rafaël, Veredsas, David, De Rock, Bram, Del Negro, Marco, Kollman, Robert, Reichlin, Lucrezia, Monti, Francesca, Giannone, Domenico, Weil, Philippe, Gassner, Marjorie, Wouters, Rafaël, Veredsas, David, De Rock, Bram, Del Negro, Marco, Kollman, Robert, Reichlin, Lucrezia, and Monti, Francesca
- Abstract
Can we fruitfully use the same macroeconomic model to forecast and to perform policy analysis? There is a tension between a model’s ability to forecast accurately and its ability to tell a theoretically consistent story. The aim of this dissertation is to propose ways to soothe this tension, combining structural and reduced-form models in order to have models that can effectively do both., Doctorat en Sciences économiques et de gestion, info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
- Published
- 2011
11. Structural models for macroeconomics and forecasting
- Author
-
Reichlin, Lucrezia, De Mol, Christine, Akl, Haidar, Wouters, Rafaël, Veredas, David, Weil, Philippe, Kollmann, Robert, De Antonio Liedo, David, Reichlin, Lucrezia, De Mol, Christine, Akl, Haidar, Wouters, Rafaël, Veredas, David, Weil, Philippe, Kollmann, Robert, and De Antonio Liedo, David
- Abstract
This Thesis is composed by three independent papers that investigatecentral debates in empirical macroeconomic modeling.Chapter 1, entitled “A Model for Real-Time Data Assessment with an Application to GDP Growth Rates”, provides a model for the datarevisions of macroeconomic variables that distinguishes between rational expectation updates and noise corrections. Thus, the model encompasses the two polar views regarding the publication process of statistical agencies: noise versus news. Most of the studies previous studies that analyze data revisions are basedon the classical noise and news regression approach introduced by Mankiew, Runkle and Shapiro (1984). The problem is that the statistical tests available do not formulate both extreme hypotheses as collectively exhaustive, as recognized by Aruoba (2008). That is, it would be possible to reject or accept both of them simultaneously. In turn, the model for theDPP presented here allows for the simultaneous presence of both noise and news. While the “regression approach” followed by Faust et al. (2005), along the lines of Mankiew et al. (1984), identifies noise in the preliminaryfigures, it is not possible for them to quantify it, as done by our model. The second and third chapters acknowledge the possibility that macroeconomic data is measured with errors, but the approach followed to model the missmeasurement is extremely stylized and does not capture the complexity of the revision process that we describe in the first chapter.Chapter 2, entitled “Revisiting the Success of the RBC model”, proposes the use of dynamic factor models as an alternative to the VAR based tools for the empirical validation of dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) theories. Along the lines of Giannone et al. (2006), we use the state-space parameterisation of the factor models proposed by Forni et al. (2007) as a competitive benchmark that is able to capture weak statistical restrictions that DSG, Doctorat en Sciences économiques et de gestion, info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
- Published
- 2010
12. Topics in macroeconomics and finance
- Author
-
Raciborski, Rafal, Weil, Philippe, Gassner, Marjorie, Veredas, David, Konieczny, Jurek, Kollmann, Robert, Giannone, Domenico, and Wouters, Rafaël
- Subjects
Cycles économiques -- Modèles mathématiques ,inflation sluggishness ,Sharpe ratio ,real business cycle model ,promotions ,prospect theory ,countercyclical risk premia ,bounded rationality ,loss aversion ,equity premium puzzle ,consumer search costs ,Inflation -- Modèles mathématiques ,Inflation (Finance) -- Mathematical models ,Economie ,incomplete price adjustment ,nominal rigidity ,Business cycles -- Mathematical models - Abstract
The thesis consists of four chapters. The introductory chapter clarifies different notions of rationality used by economists and gives a summary of the remainder of the thesis. Chapter 2 proposes an explanation for the common empirical observation of the coexistence of infrequently-changing regular price ceilings and promotion-like price patterns. The results derive from enriching an otherwise standard, albeit stylized, general equilibrium model with two elements. First, the consumer-producer interaction is modeled in the spirit of the price dispersion literature, by introducing oligopolistic markets, consumer search costs and heterogeneity. Second, consumers are assumed to be boundedly-rational: In order to incorporate new information about the general price level, they have to incur a small cognitive cost. The decision whether to re-optimize or act according to the obsolete knowledge about prices is itself a result of optimization. It is shown that in this economy, individual retail prices are capped below the monopoly price, but are otherwise flexible. Moreover, they have the following three properties: 1) An individual price has a positive probability of being equal to the ceiling. 2) Prices have a tendency to fall below the ceiling and then be reset back to the cap value. 3) The ceiling remains constant for extended time intervals even when the mean rate of inflation is positive. Properties 1) and 2) can be associated with promotions and properties 1) and 3) imply the emergence of nominal price rigidity. The results do not rely on any type of direct costs of price adjustment. Instead, price stickiness derives from frictions on the consumers’ side of the market, in line with the results of several managerial surveys. It is shown that the developed theory, compared to the classic menu costs-based approach, does better in matching the stylized facts about the reaction of individual prices to inflation. In terms of quantitative assessment, the model, when calibrated to realistic parameter values, produces median price ceiling durations that match values reported in empirical studies.The starting point of the essay in Chapter 3 is the observation that the baseline New-Keynesian model, which relies solely on the notion of infrequent price adjustment, cannot account for the observed degree of inflation sluggishness. Therefore, it is a common practice among macro- modelers to introduce an ad hoc additional source of persistence to their models, by assuming that price setters, when adjusting a price of their product, do not set it equal to its unobserved individual optimal level, but instead catch up with the optimal price only gradually. In the paper, a model of incomplete adjustment is built which allows for explicitly testing whether price-setters adjust to the shocks to the unobserved optimal price only gradually and, if so, measure the speed of the catching up process. According to the author, a similar test has not been performed before. It is found that new prices do not generally match their estimated optimal level. However, only in some sectors, e.g. for some industrial goods and services, prices adjust to this level gradually, which should add to the aggregate inflation sluggishness. In other sectors, particularly food, price-setters seem to overreact to shocks, with new prices overshooting the optimal level. These sectors are likely to contribute to decreasing the aggregate inflation sluggishness. Overall, these findings are consistent with the view that price-setters are boundedly-rational. However, they do not provide clear-cut support for the existence of an additional source of inflation persistence due to gradual individual price adjustment. Instead, they suggest that general equilibrium macroeconomic models may need to include at least two types of production sectors, characterized by a contrasting behavior of price-setters. An additional finding stemming from this work is that the idiosyncratic component of the optimal individual price is well approximated by a random walk. This is in line with the assumptions maintained in most of the theoretical literature. Chapter 4 of the thesis has been co-authored by Julia Lendvai. In this paper a full-fledged production economy model with Kahneman and Tversky’s Prospect Theory features is constructed. The agents’ objective function is assumed to be a weighted sum of the usual utility over consumption and leisure and the utility over relative changes of agents’ wealth. It is also assumed that agents are loss-averse: They are more sensitive to wealth losses than to gains. Apart from the changes in the utility, the model is set-up in a standard Real Business Cycle framework. The authors study prices of stocks and risk-free bonds in this economy. Their work shows that under plausible parameterizations of the objective function, the model is able to explain a wide set of unconditional asset return moments, including the mean return on risk-free bonds, equity premium and the Sharpe Ratio. When the degree of loss aversion in the model is additionally assumed to be state-dependent, the model also produces countercyclical risk premia. This helps it match an array of conditional moments and in particular the predictability pattern of stock returns., Doctorat en Sciences économiques et de gestion, info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
- Published
- 2014
13. Combining structural and reduced-form models for macroeconomic forecasting and policy analysis
- Author
-
Monti, Francesca, Giannone, Domenico, Weil, Philippe, Gassner, Marjorie, Wouters, Rafaël, Veredsas, David, De Rock, Bram, Del Negro, Marco, Kollman, Robert, and Reichlin, Lucrezia
- Subjects
Macroeconomics -- Forecasting ,Macroeconomics -- Mathematical models ,Economie ,real-time ,misspecification ,structural models ,Macroéconomie -- Prévision ,forecasting judgment ,Macroéconomie -- Modèles mathématiques - Abstract
Can we fruitfully use the same macroeconomic model to forecast and to perform policy analysis? There is a tension between a model’s ability to forecast accurately and its ability to tell a theoretically consistent story. The aim of this dissertation is to propose ways to soothe this tension, combining structural and reduced-form models in order to have models that can effectively do both., Doctorat en Sciences économiques et de gestion, info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
- Published
- 2011
14. Structural Models for Macroeconomics and Forecasting
- Author
-
De Antonio Liedo, David, Wouters, Rafael, Veredas, David, Weil, Philippe, Kollmann, Robert, Cantillon, Estelle, De Mol, Christine, Reichlin, Lucrezia, Akl, Haidar, and Wouters, Rafaël
- Subjects
DSGE models ,Sciences sociales ,Economic forecasting -- Econometric models ,Dynamic Factor Models ,Prévision économique -- Modèles économétriques ,Macroeconomics -- Mathematical models ,Economie ,Macroéconomie -- Modèles mathématiques ,real-time data - Abstract
This Thesis is composed by three independent papers that investigatecentral debates in empirical macroeconomic modeling.Chapter 1, entitled “A Model for Real-Time Data Assessment with an Application to GDP Growth Rates”, provides a model for the datarevisions of macroeconomic variables that distinguishes between rational expectation updates and noise corrections. Thus, the model encompasses the two polar views regarding the publication process of statistical agencies: noise versus news. Most of the studies previous studies that analyze data revisions are basedon the classical noise and news regression approach introduced by Mankiew, Runkle and Shapiro (1984). The problem is that the statistical tests available do not formulate both extreme hypotheses as collectively exhaustive, as recognized by Aruoba (2008). That is, it would be possible to reject or accept both of them simultaneously. In turn, the model for theDPP presented here allows for the simultaneous presence of both noise and news. While the “regression approach” followed by Faust et al. (2005), along the lines of Mankiew et al. (1984), identifies noise in the preliminaryfigures, it is not possible for them to quantify it, as done by our model. The second and third chapters acknowledge the possibility that macroeconomic data is measured with errors, but the approach followed to model the missmeasurement is extremely stylized and does not capture the complexity of the revision process that we describe in the first chapter.Chapter 2, entitled “Revisiting the Success of the RBC model”, proposes the use of dynamic factor models as an alternative to the VAR based tools for the empirical validation of dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) theories. Along the lines of Giannone et al. (2006), we use the state-space parameterisation of the factor models proposed by Forni et al. (2007) as a competitive benchmark that is able to capture weak statistical restrictions that DSGE models impose on the data. Our empirical illustration compares the out-of-sample forecasting performance of a simple RBC model augmented with a serially correlated noise component against several specifications belonging to classes of dynamic factor and VAR models. Although the performance of the RBC model is comparableto that of the reduced form models, a formal test of predictive accuracy reveals that the weak restrictions are more useful at forecasting than the strong behavioral assumptions imposed by the microfoundations in the model economy.The last chapter, “What are Shocks Capturing in DSGE modeling”, contributes to current debates on the use and interpretation of larger DSGEmodels. Recent tendency in academic work and at central banks is to develop and estimate large DSGE models for policy analysis and forecasting. These models typically have many shocks (e.g. Smets and Wouters, 2003 and Adolfson, Laseen, Linde and Villani, 2005). On the other hand, empirical studies point out that few large shocks are sufficient to capture the covariance structure of macro data (Giannone, Reichlin andSala, 2005, Uhlig, 2004). In this Chapter, we propose to reconcile both views by considering an alternative DSGE estimation approach whichmodels explicitly the statistical agency along the lines of Sargent (1989). This enables us to distinguish whether the exogenous shocks in DSGEmodeling are structural or instead serve the purpose of fitting the data in presence of misspecification and measurement problems. When applied to the original Smets and Wouters (2007) model, we find that the explanatory power of the structural shocks decreases at high frequencies. This allows us to back out a smoother measure of the natural output gap than thatresulting from the original specification., Doctorat en Sciences économiques et de gestion, info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
- Published
- 2010
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.