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- Creator:
- Gao, Han; Kulish, Mariano; and Nicolini, Juan Pablo
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 634
- Keyword:
- Monetary policy, Money demand, and Monetary aggregates
- Subject (JEL):
- E41 - Demand for Money, E52 - Monetary Policy, and E51 - Money Supply; Credit; Money Multipliers
- Creator:
- Chari, V. V. and Cole, Harold Linh, 1957-
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 156
- Abstract:
In this paper we present a formal model of vote trading within a legislature. The model captures the conventional wisdom that if projects with concentrated benefits are financed by universal taxation, then majority rule leads to excessive spending. This occurs because the proponent of a particular bill only needs to acquire the votes of half the legislature and hence internalizes the costs to only half the representatives. We show that Pareto superior allocations are difficult to sustain because of a free rider problem among the representatives. We show that alternative voting rules, such as unanimity, eliminate excessive spending on concentrated benefit projects but lead to underfunding of global public goods.
- Creator:
- Kiyotaki, Nobuhiro and Lagos, Ricardo
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 358
- Abstract:
We develop a model of gross job and worker flows and use it to study how the wages, permanent incomes, and employment status of individual workers evolve over time. Our model helps explain various features of labor markets, such as the amount of worker turnover in excess of job reallocation, the length of job tenures and unemployment duration, and the size and persistence of the changes in income that workers experience due to displacements or job-to-job transitions. We also examine the effects that labor market institutions and public policy have on the gross flows, as well as on the resulting wage distribution and employment in the equilibrium. From a theoretical standpoint, we propose a notion of competitive equilibrium for random matching environments, and study the extent to which it achieves an efficient allocation of resources.
- Creator:
- Thomas, Julia K.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 302
- Abstract:
Previous research has suggested that discrete and occasional plant-level capital adjustments have significant aggregate implications. In particular, it has been argued that changes in plants’ willingness to invest in response to aggregate shocks can at times generate large movements in total investment demand. In this study, I re-assess these predictions in a general equilibrium environment. Specifically, assuming nonconvex costs of capital adjustment, I derive generalized (S,s) adjustment rules yielding lumpy plant-level investment within an otherwise standard equilibrium business cycle model. In contrast to previous partial equilibrium analyses, model results reveal that the aggregate effects of lumpy investment are negligible. In general equilibrium, households’ preference for relatively smooth consumption profiles offsets changes in aggregate investment demand implied by the introduction of lumpy plant-level investment. As a result, adjustments in wages and interest rates yield quantity dynamics that are virtually indistinguishable from the standard model.
- Keyword:
- Business Cycles, Lumpy Investment, and (S,s) Adjustment
- Subject (JEL):
- E22 - Investment; Capital; Intangible Capital; Capacity and E32 - Business Fluctuations; Cycles
- Creator:
- Huang, Kevin X. D.; Liu, Zheng; and Zhu, Qi
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 367
- Abstract:
This paper studies the empirical relevance of temptation and self-control using household-level data from the Consumer Expenditure Survey. We estimate an infinite-horizon consumption-savings model that allows, but does not require, temptation and self-control in preferences. To help identify the presence of temptation, we exploit an implication of the theory that a tempted individual has a preference for commitment. In the presence of temptation, the cross-sectional distribution of the wealth-consumption ratio, in addition to that of consumption growth, becomes a determinant of the asset-pricing kernel, and the importance of this additional pricing factor depends on the strength of temptation. The estimates that we obtain provide statistical evidence supporting the presence of temptation. Based on our estimates, we explore some quantitative implications of this class of preferences on equity premium and on the welfare cost of business cycles.
- Keyword:
- Intertemporal decision, Limited participation, Temptation, Self-control, and Consumption
- Subject (JEL):
- E21 - Macroeconomics: Consumption; Saving; Wealth and D91 - Micro-Based Behavioral Economics: Role and Effects of Psychological, Emotional, Social, and Cognitive Factors on Decision Making
- Creator:
- Chari, V. V.; Kehoe, Patrick J.; and McGrattan, Ellen R.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 353
- Abstract:
In recent financial crises and in recent theoretical studies of them, abrupt declines in capital inflows, or sudden stops, have been linked with large drops in output. Do sudden stops cause output drops? No, according to a standard equilibrium model in which sudden stops are generated by an abrupt tightening of a country’s collateral constraint on foreign borrowing. In this model, in fact, sudden stops lead to output increases, not decreases. An examination of the quantitative effects of a well-known sudden stop, in Mexico in the mid-1990s, confirms that a drop in output accompanying a sudden stop cannot be accounted for by the sudden stop alone. To generate an output drop during a financial crisis, as other studies have done, the model must include other economic frictions which have negative effects on output large enough to overwhelm the positive effect of the sudden stop.
- Subject (JEL):
- O16 - Economic Development: Financial Markets; Saving and Capital Investment; Corporate Finance and Governance, F21 - International Investment; Long-term Capital Movements, O19 - International Linkages to Development; Role of International Organizations, and O47 - Empirical Studies of Economic Growth; Aggregate Productivity; Cross-Country Output Convergence
- Creator:
- Alvarez, Fernando, 1964- and Atkeson, Andrew
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 577
- Abstract:
We develop a new general equilibrium model of asset pricing and asset trading volume in which agents’ motivations to trade arise due to uninsurable idiosyncratic shocks to agents’ risk tolerance. In response to these shocks, agents trade to rebalance their portfolios between risky and riskless assets. We study a positive question — When does trade volume become a pricing factor? — and a normative question — What is the impact of Tobin taxes on asset trading on welfare? In our model, economies in which marketwide risk tolerance is negatively correlated with trade volume have a higher risk premium for aggregate risk. Likewise, for a given economy, we find that assets whose cash flows are concentrated on states with high trading volume have higher prices and lower risk premia. We then show that Tobin taxes on asset trade have a first-order negative impact on ex-ante welfare, i.e., a small subsidy to trade leads to an improvement in ex-ante welfare. Finally, we develop an alternative version of our model in which asset trade arises from uninsurable idiosyncratic shocks to agents’ hedging needs rather than shocks to their risk tolerance. We show that our positive results regarding the relationship between trade volume and asset prices carry through. In contrast, the normative implications of this specification of our model for Tobin taxes or subsidies depend on the specification of agents’ preferences and non-traded endowments.
- Keyword:
- Trade volume, Asset pricing, Liquidity, and Tobin taxes
- Subject (JEL):
- G12 - Asset Pricing; Trading Volume; Bond Interest Rates
- Creator:
- Heathcote, Jonathan; Storesletten, Kjetil; and Violante, Giovanni L.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 496
- Abstract:
What shapes the optimal degree of progressivity of the tax and transfer system? On the one hand, a progressive tax system can counteract inequality in initial conditions and substitute for imperfect private insurance against idiosyncratic earnings risk. On the other hand, progressivity reduces incentives to work and to invest in skills, distortions that are especially costly when the government must finance public goods. We develop a tractable equilibrium model that features all of these trade-offs. The analytical expressions we derive for social welfare deliver a transparent understanding of how preference, technology, and market structure parameters influence the optimal degree of progressivity. A calibration for the U.S. economy indicates that endogenous skill investment, flexible labor supply, and the desire to finance government purchases play quantitatively similar roles in limiting optimal progressivity. In a version of the model where poverty constrains skill investment, optimal progressivity is close to the U.S. value. An empirical analysis on cross-country data offers support to the theory.
- Keyword:
- Tax progressivity, Government expenditures, Labor supply, Skill investment, Income distribution, Partial insurance, Cross-country evidence, and Welfare
- Subject (JEL):
- H20 - Taxation, Subsidies, and Revenue: General, H40 - Publicly Provided Goods: General, E20 - Consumption, Saving, Production, Investment, Labor Markets, and Informal Economy: General (includes Measurement and Data), D30 - Distribution: General, J22 - Time Allocation and Labor Supply, and J24 - Human Capital; Skills; Occupational Choice; Labor Productivity
- Creator:
- Cole, Harold Linh, 1957- and Kehoe, Patrick J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 137
- Abstract:
A traditional explanation for why sovereign governments repay debts is that they want to keep a good reputation so they can easily borrow more. Bulow and Rogoff have challenged this explanation. They argue that, in complete information models, government borrowing requires direct legal sanctions. We argue that, in incomplete information models with multiple trust relationships, large amounts of government borrowing can be supported by reputation alone.
611. Sustainable Plans
- Creator:
- Chari, V. V. and Kehoe, Patrick J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 122
- Abstract:
We propose a definition of time consistent policy for infinite horizon economies with competitive private agents. Allocations and policies are defined as functions of the history of past policies. A sustainable equilibrium is a sequence of history-contingent policies and allocations that satisfy certain sequential rationality conditions for the government and for private agents. We provide a complete characterization of the sustainable equilibrium outcomes for a variant of Fischer’s (1980) model of capital taxation. We also relate our work to recent developments in the theory of repeated games.
- Creator:
- Neumeyer, Pablo Andrés and Perri, Fabrizio
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 335
- Abstract:
We find that in a sample of emerging economies business cycles are more volatile than in developed ones, real interest rates are countercyclical and lead the cycle, consumption is more volatile than output and net exports are strongly countercyclical. We present a model of a small open economy, where the real interest rate is decomposed in an international rate and a country risk component. Country risk is affected by fundamental shocks but, through the presence of working capital, also amplifies the effects of those shocks. The model generates business cycles consistent with Argentine data. Eliminating country risk lowers Argentine output volatility by 27% while stabilizing international rates lowers it by less than 3%.
- Keyword:
- International business cycles, Working capital, Financial crises, Country risk, and Sudden stops
- Subject (JEL):
- F41 - Open Economy Macroeconomics, F32 - Current Account Adjustment; Short-term Capital Movements, and E32 - Business Fluctuations; Cycles
- Creator:
- Doan, Thomas; Litterman, Robert B.; and Sims, Christopher A.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 093
- Abstract:
This paper develops a forecasting procedure based on a Bayesian method for estimating vector autoregressions. We apply the procedure to 10 macroeconomic variables and show that it produces more accurate out-of-sample forecasts than univariate equations do. Although cross-variable responses are damped by the prior, our estimates capture considerable interaction among the variables.
We provide unconditional forecasts as of 1982:12 and 1983:3. We also describe how a model such as this can be used to make conditional projections and analyze policy alternatives. As an example, we analyze a Congressional Budget Office forecast made in 1982:12.
While no automatic casual interpretations arise from models like ours, such models provide a detailed characterization of the dynamic statistical interdependence of a set of economic variables. That information may help evaluate casual hypotheses without containing any such hypotheses.
- Keyword:
- Conditional projections, Vector autoregressions, Forecasting, Macroeconomic modeling, and Rayesian analysis
- Creator:
- Kehoe, Timothy Jerome, 1953-; Nicolini, Juan Pablo; and Sargent, Thomas J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 607
- Abstract:
We develop a conceptual framework for analyzing the interactions between aggregate fiscal policy and monetary policy. The framework draws on existing models that analyze sovereign debt crises and balance-of-payments crises. We intend this framework as a guide for analyzing the monetary and fiscal history of a set of eleven major Latin American countries—Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela—from the 1960s until now.
- Keyword:
- Fiscal policy, Monetary policy, Debt crisis, Off-budget transfers, and Banking crisis
- Subject (JEL):
- E52 - Monetary Policy, E63 - Comparative or Joint Analysis of Fiscal and Monetary Policy; Stabilization; Treasury Policy, H63 - National Debt; Debt Management; Sovereign Debt, and N16 - Economic History: Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics; Industrial Structure; Growth; Fluctuations: Latin America; Caribbean
- Creator:
- Holmes, Thomas J.; Levine, David K.; and Schmitz, James Andrew
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 402
- Abstract:
Arrow (1962) argued that since a monopoly restricts output relative to a competitive industry, it would be less willing to pay a fixed cost to adopt a new technology. Arrow’s idea has been challenged and critiques have shown that under different assumptions, increases in competition lead to less innovation. We develop a new theory of why a monopolistic industry innovates less than a competitive industry. The key is that firms often face major problems in integrating new technologies. In some cases, upon adoption of technology, firms must temporarily reduce output. We call such problems switchover disruptions. If firms face switchover disruptions, then a cost of adoption is the forgone rents on the sales of lost or delayed production, and these opportunity costs are larger the higher the price on those lost units. In particular, with greater monopoly power, the greater the forgone rents. This idea has significant consequences since if we add switchover disruptions to standard models, then the critiques of Arrow lose their force: competition again leads to greater adoption. In addition, we show that our model helps explain the accumulating evidence that competition leads to greater adoption (whereas the standard models cannot).
- Subject (JEL):
- D42 - Market Structure, Pricing, and Design: Monopoly, O32 - Management of Technological Innovation and R&D, D21 - Firm Behavior: Theory, O33 - Technological Change: Choices and Consequences; Diffusion Processes, L14 - Transactional Relationships; Contracts and Reputation; Networks, and L12 - Monopoly; Monopolization Strategies
- Creator:
- Aguiar, Mark; Amador, Manuel; Farhi, Emmanuel; and Gopinath, Gita, 1971-
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 511
- Abstract:
We study fiscal and monetary policy in a monetary union with the potential for rollover crises in sovereign debt markets. Member-country fiscal authorities lack commitment to repay their debt and choose fiscal policy independently. A common monetary authority chooses inflation for the union, also without commitment. We first describe the existence of a fiscal externality that arises in the presence of limited commitment and leads countries to over-borrow; this externality rationalizes the imposition of debt ceilings in a monetary union. We then investigate the impact of the composition of debt in a monetary union, that is the fraction of high-debt versus low-debt members, on the occurrence of self-fulfilling debt crises. We demonstrate that a high-debt country may be less vulnerable to crises and have higher welfare when it belongs to a union with an intermediate mix of high- and low-debt members, than one where all other members are low-debt. This contrasts with the conventional wisdom that all countries should prefer a union with low-debt members, as such a union can credibly deliver low inflation. These findings shed new light on the criteria for an optimal currency area in the presence of rollover crises.
- Keyword:
- Monetary union, Coordination failures, Fiscal policy , and Debt crisis
- Subject (JEL):
- F30 - International Finance: General, E40 - Money and Interest Rates: General, F40 - Macroeconomic Aspects of International Trade and Finance: General, and E50 - Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit: General
- Creator:
- Bhandari, Anmol and McGrattan, Ellen R.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 560
- Abstract:
We develop a theory of sweat equity—the value of business owners' time and expenses to build customer bases, client lists, and other intangible assets. We discipline the theory using data from U.S. national accounts, business censuses, and brokered sales to estimate a value for sweat equity in the private business sector equal to 1.2 times U.S. GDP, which is about the same magnitude as the value of fixed assets in use in these businesses. For a typical owner, 26 percent of the sweat equity is transferable through inheritance or sale. The equity values are positively correlated with business incomes and standard measures of markups based on accounting data, but not with owners' financial assets or standard measures of business total factor productivity. We use our theory to show that abstracting from sweat activity leads to a significant understatement of the impacts of lowering business income tax rates on private business activity for both the extensive and intensive margins. Despite finding larger responses, our model's implied tax elasticities of establishments and owner hours are in line with empirical estimates in the public finance literature. Allowing for financial constraints and superstar firms does not overturn our main findings.
- Keyword:
- Business valuation and Intangibles
- Subject (JEL):
- H25 - Business Taxes and Subsidies including sales and value-added (VAT), E22 - Investment; Capital; Intangible Capital; Capacity, and E13 - General Aggregative Models: Neoclassical
- Creator:
- Skoog, Gary R.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 014
- Abstract:
No abstract available.
- Creator:
- Rolnick, Arthur J., 1944- and Weber, Warren E.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 097
- Abstract:
This paper explains why the risky notes of banks established during the Free Banking Era (1837–63) were demanded even when relatively safe specie (gold and silver coin) was an alternative. Free bank notes were demanded because they were priced to reflect the expected value of their backing. The empirical evidence supports this explanation. Specifically, in New York, Wisconsin, and Indiana the expected value of backing was sufficient for free bank notes to circulate at par, which they did. In Minnesota the backing for notes was very poor: they exchanged well below par, being treated as small-denomination securities.
- Creator:
- Cai, Zhifeng and Heathcote, Jonathan
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 569
- Abstract:
This paper evaluates the role of rising income inequality in explaining observed growth in college tuition. We develop a competitive model of the college market, in which college quality depends on instructional expenditure and the average ability of admitted students. An innovative feature of our model is that it allows for a continuous distribution of college quality. We find that observed increases in US income inequality can explain more than half of the observed rise in average net tuition since 1990 and that rising income inequality has also depressed college attendance.
- Keyword:
- College tuition, Income inequality, and Club goods
- Subject (JEL):
- I23 - Higher Education; Research Institutions, I24 - Education and Inequality, and I22 - Educational Finance; Financial Aid
- Creator:
- Bianchi, Javier and Bigio, Saki
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 503
- Abstract:
We develop a new tractable model of banks' liquidity management and the credit channel of monetary policy. Banks finance loans by issuing demand deposits. Because loans are illiquid, deposit transfers across banks must be settled with reserves. Deposit withdrawals are random, and banks manage liquidity risk by holding a precautionary buffer of reserves. We show how different shocks affect the banking system by altering the trade-off between profiting from lending and incurring greater liquidity risk. Through various tools, monetary policy affects the real economy by altering that trade-off. In a quantitative application, we study the driving forces behind the decline in lending and liquidity hoarding by banks during the 2008 financial crisis. Our analysis underscores the importance of disruptions in interbank markets followed by a persistent decline in credit demand.
- Keyword:
- Monetary policy, Capital requirements, Liquidity, and Banks
- Subject (JEL):
- E52 - Monetary Policy, E51 - Money Supply; Credit; Money Multipliers, E44 - Financial Markets and the Macroeconomy, and G10 - General Financial Markets: General (includes Measurement and Data)
- Creator:
- Kehoe, Patrick J.; Lopez, Pierlauro; Midrigan, Virgiliu; and Pastorino, Elena
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 617
- Abstract:
Although a credit tightening is commonly recognized as a key determinant of the Great Recession, to date, it is unclear whether a worsening of credit conditions faced by households or by firms was most responsible for the downturn. Some studies have suggested that the household-side credit channel is quantitatively the most important one. Many others contend that the firm-side channel played a crucial role. We propose a model in which both channels are present and explicitly formalized. Our analysis indicates that the household-side credit channel is quantitatively more relevant than the firm-side credit channel. We then evaluate the relative benefits of a fixed-sized transfer to households and to firms that improves each group's access to credit. We find that the effects of such a transfer on employment are substantially larger when the transfer targets households rather than firms. Hence, we provide theoretical and quantitative support to the view that the employment decline during the Great Recession would have been less severe if instead of focusing on easing firms' access to credit, the government had expended an equal amount of resources to alleviate households' credit constraints.
- Keyword:
- Government transfers, Credit constraints, Collateral constraints, Great Recession, and Financial recession
- Subject (JEL):
- G51 - Household Saving, Borrowing, Debt, and Wealth, E30 - Prices, Business Fluctuations, and Cycles: General (includes Measurement and Data), J20 - Demand and Supply of Labor: General, E32 - Business Fluctuations; Cycles, E62 - Fiscal Policy, and J60 - Mobility, Unemployment, Vacancies, and Immigrant Workers: General
- Creator:
- Heathcote, Jonathan and Tsujiyama, Hitoshi
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 507
- Abstract:
What structure of income taxation maximizes the social benefits of redistribution while minimizing the social harm associated with distorting the allocation of labor input? Many authors have advocated scrapping the current tax system, which redistributes primarily via marginal tax rates that rise with income, and replacing it with a flat tax system, in which marginal tax rates are constant and redistribution is achieved via non-means-tested transfers. In this paper we compare alternative tax systems in an environment with distinct roles for public and private insurance. We evaluate alternative policies using a social welfare function designed to capture the taste for redistribution reflected in the current tax system. In our preferred specification, moving to the optimal flat tax policy reduces welfare, whereas moving to the optimal fully nonlinear Mirrlees policy generates only tiny welfare gains. These findings suggest that proposals for dramatic tax reform should be viewed with caution.
- Keyword:
- Tax progressivity, Mirrlees taxation, Optimal income taxation, Flat tax, Ramsey taxation, Social welfare functions, and Private insurance
- Subject (JEL):
- H23 - Taxation and Subsidies: Externalities; Redistributive Effects; Environmental Taxes and Subsidies, H21 - Taxation and Subsidies: Efficiency; Optimal Taxation, H31 - Fiscal Policies and Behavior of Economic Agents: Household, and E62 - Fiscal Policy
- Creator:
- Ai, Hengjie and Bhandari, Anmol
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 570
- Abstract:
This paper studies asset pricing and labor market dynamics when idiosyncratic risk to human capital is not fully insurable. Firms use long-term contracts to provide insurance to workers, but neither side can fully commit; furthermore, owing to costly and unobservable retention effort, worker-firm relationships have endogenous durations. Uninsured tail risk in labor earnings arises as a part of an optimal risk-sharing scheme. In equilibrium, exposure to the tail risk generates higher aggregate risk premia and higher return volatility. Consistent with data, firm-level labor share predicts both future returns and pass-throughs of firm-level shocks to labor compensation.
- Keyword:
- Tail risk, Equity premium puzzle, Limited commitment, and Dynamic contracting
- Subject (JEL):
- E30 - Prices, Business Fluctuations, and Cycles: General (includes Measurement and Data) and G10 - General Financial Markets: General (includes Measurement and Data)
- Creator:
- Holmes, Thomas J. and Schmitz, James Andrew
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 439
- Abstract:
Does competition spur productivity? And if so, how does it do so? These have long been regarded as central questions in economics. This essay reviews the literature that makes progress toward answering both questions.
- Keyword:
- Market power, Innovation, and Monopoly
- Creator:
- Hansen, Lars Peter and Sargent, Thomas J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 073
- Abstract:
This paper shows how the cross-equation restrictions implied by dynamic rational expectations models can be used to resolve the aliasing identification problem. Using a continuous time, linear-quadratic optimization environment, this paper describes how the resulting restrictions are sufficient to identify the parameters of the underlying continuous time process when it is known that the true continuous time process has a rational spectral density matrix.
- Creator:
- Khan, Aubhik and Thomas, Julia K.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 306
- Abstract:
Recent empirical analysis has found nonlinearities to be important in understanding aggregated investment. Using an equilibrium business cycle model, we search for aggregate nonlinearities arising from the introduction of nonconvex capital adjustment costs. We find that, while such costs lead to nontrivial nonlinearities in aggregate investment demand, equilibrium investment is effectively unchanged. Our finding, based on a model in which aggregate fluctuations arise through exogenous changes in total factor productivity, is robust to the introduction of shocks to the relative price of investment goods.
- Keyword:
- Adjustment costs, Business cycles, Nonlinearities, and Lumpy investment
- Subject (JEL):
- E32 - Business Fluctuations; Cycles and E22 - Investment; Capital; Intangible Capital; Capacity
- Creator:
- Chahrour, Ryan and Stevens, Luminita
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 522
- Abstract:
We develop a model of equilibrium price dispersion via retailer search and show that the degree of market segmentation within and across countries cannot be separately identified by good-level price data alone. We augment a set of well-known empirical facts about the failure of the law of one price with data on aggregate intranational and international trade quantities, and calibrate the model to match price and quantity facts simultaneously. The calibrated model matches the data very well and implies that within-country markets are strongly segmented, while international borders contribute virtually no additional market segmentation.
- Keyword:
- Border effect, Real exchange rate, and Law of one price
- Subject (JEL):
- F30 - International Finance: General, F41 - Open Economy Macroeconomics, and E30 - Prices, Business Fluctuations, and Cycles: General (includes Measurement and Data)
- Creator:
- Cooper, Russell and Willis, Jonathan L.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 310
- Abstract:
We study inferences about the dynamics of labor adjustment obtained by the “gap methodology” of Caballero and Engel [1993] and Caballero, Engel and Haltiwanger [1997]. In that approach, the policy function for employment growth is assumed to depend on an unobservable gap between the target and current levels of employment. Using time series observations, these studies reject the partial adjustment model and find that aggregate employment dynamics depend on the cross-sectional distribution of employment gaps. Thus, nonlinear adjustment at the plant level appears to have aggregate implications. We argue that this conclusion is not justified: these findings of nonlinearities in time series data may reflect mismeasurement of the gaps rather than the aggregation of plant-level nonlinearities.
- Keyword:
- Adjustment Costs, Aggregate Employment, and Employment
- Subject (JEL):
- J23 - Labor Demand, E24 - Employment; Unemployment; Wages; Intergenerational Income Distribution; Aggregate Human Capital; Aggregate Labor Productivity, and J60 - Mobility, Unemployment, Vacancies, and Immigrant Workers: General
- Creator:
- Cole, Harold Linh, 1957- and Kehoe, Patrick J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 179
- Abstract:
A standard explanation for why sovereign governments repay their debts is that they must maintain a good reputation to easily borrow more. We show that the ability of reputation to support debt depends critically on the assumptions made about institutions. At one extreme, we assume that bankers can default on payments they owe to governments. At the other, we assume that bankers are committed to honoring contracts made with governments. We show that if bankers can default, then a government gets enduring benefits from maintaining a good relationship with bankers and its reputation can support a large amount of borrowing. If, however, bankers must honor their contracts, then a government gets only transient benefits from maintaining a good relationship and its reputation can support zero borrowing.
- Keyword:
- Sovereign debt, Default, and Reputation
- Subject (JEL):
- F30 - International Finance: General and F34 - International Lending and Debt Problems
- Creator:
- Atkeson, Andrew and Kehoe, Patrick J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 291
- Abstract:
Manufacturing plants have a clear life cycle: they are born small, grow substantially as they age, and eventually die. Economists have long thought that this life cycle is driven by the accumulation of plant-specific knowledge, here called organization capital. Theory suggests that where plants are in the life cycle determines the size of the payments, or dividends, plant owners receive from organization capital. These payments are compensation for the interest cost to plant owners of waiting for their plants to grow. We build a quantitative growth model of the life cycle of plants and use it, along with U.S. data, to infer the overall size of these payments. They turn out to be quite large—more than one-third the size of the payments plant owners receive from physical capital, net of new investment, and more than 40% of payments from all forms of intangible capital.
- Subject (JEL):
- E13 - General Aggregative Models: Neoclassical, B41 - Economic Methodology, E25 - Aggregate Factor Income Distribution, and E22 - Investment; Capital; Intangible Capital; Capacity
- Creator:
- Jones, Larry E.; Manuelli, Rodolfo E.; and McGrattan, Ellen R.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 317
- Abstract:
We study the large observed changes in labor supply by married women in the United States over the post–World War II period, a period that saw little change in the labor supply by single women. We investigate the effects of changes in the gender wage gap, the quantitative impact of technological improvements in the production of nonmarket goods, and the potential inferiority of nonmarket goods in explaining the dramatic change in labor supply. We find that small decreases in the gender wage gap can simultaneously explain the significant increases in the average hours worked by married women and the relative constancy in the hours worked by single women and by single and married men. We also find that the impact of technological improvements in the household on married female hours and on the relative wage of females to males is too small for realistic values. Some specifications of the inferiority of home goods match the hours patterns, but they have counterfactual predictions for wages and expenditure patterns.
- Keyword:
- Hours of work , Gender wage gap, and Technological improvements
- Subject (JEL):
- J22 - Time Allocation and Labor Supply and E24 - Employment; Unemployment; Wages; Intergenerational Income Distribution; Aggregate Human Capital; Aggregate Labor Productivity
- Creator:
- Chari, V. V. and Kehoe, Patrick J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 251
- Abstract:
We provide an introduction to optimal fiscal and monetary policy using the primal approach to optimal taxation. We use this approach to address how fiscal and monetary policy should be set over the long run and over the business cycle. We find four substantive lessons for policymaking: Capital income taxes should be high initially and then roughly zero; tax rates on labor and consumption should be roughly constant; state-contingent taxes on assets should be used to provide insurance against adverse shocks; and monetary policy should be conducted so as to keep nominal interest rates close to zero. We begin optimal taxation in a static context. We then develop a general framework to analyze optimal fiscal policy. Finally, we analyze optimal monetary policy in three commonly used models of money: a cash-credit economy, a money-in-the-utility-function economy, and a shopping-time economy.
- Keyword:
- Capital income taxation, Friedman rule, Ramsey problems, Tax smoothing, and Primal approach
- Subject (JEL):
- H21 - Taxation and Subsidies: Efficiency; Optimal Taxation, E60 - Macroeconomic Policy, Macroeconomic Aspects of Public Finance, and General Outlook: General, H30 - Fiscal Policies and Behavior of Economic Agents: General, E50 - Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit: General, E62 - Fiscal Policy, and E52 - Monetary Policy
- Creator:
- Sargent, Thomas J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 077
- Abstract:
This paper surveys recent issues in macroeconomics from the viewpoint of dynamic economic theory. The need to look beyond demand and supply curves and the insights that come from doing so are emphasized. Examples of issues in debt management and fiscal policy are analyzed.
- Creator:
- Sargent, Thomas J. and Wallace, Neil
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 085
- Abstract:
Commodity money is modeled as one or two of the capital goods in a one-consumption good and one or two capital-good, overlapping generations model. Among the topics addressed using versions of the model are (i) the nature of the inefficiency of commodity money; (ii) the validity of quantity-theory predictions for commodity money systems; (iii) the circumstances under which one commodity emerges naturally as the commodity money; (iv) the role of inside money (money backed by private debt) in commodity money systems; and (v) the circumstances under which a government can choose the commodity to serve as the commodity money.
- Creator:
- Lagos, Ricardo and Wright, Randall, 1956-
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 346
- Abstract:
Search-theoretic models of monetary exchange are based on explicit descriptions of the frictions that make money essential. However, tractable versions of these models typically need strong assumptions that make them ill-suited for studying monetary policy. We propose a framework based on explicit micro foundations within which macro policy can be analyzed. The model is both analytically tractable and amenable to quantitative analysis. We demonstrate this by using it to estimate the welfare cost of inflation. We find much higher costs than the previous literature: our model predicts that going from 10% to 0% inflation can be worth between 3% and 5% of consumption.
- Creator:
- Phelan, Christopher
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 268
- Abstract:
This paper presents a government debt game with the property that if the timing of debt auctions within a period is sufficiently unfettered, the set of equilibrium outcome paths of real economic variables given the government has access to a rich debt structure is identical to the set of equilibrium outcome paths given the government can issue only one-period debt.
- Subject (JEL):
- H63 - National Debt; Debt Management; Sovereign Debt and F34 - International Lending and Debt Problems
- Creator:
- Werning, Ivan
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 365
- Abstract:
We study optimal labor and capital taxation in a dynamic economy subject to government expenditure and aggregate productivity shocks. We relax two assumptions from Ramsey models: that a representative agent exists and that taxation is proportional with no lump-sum tax. In contrast, we capture a redistributive motive for distortive taxation by allowing privately observed differences in relative skills across workers. We consider two scenarios for tax instruments: (i) taxation is linear with arbitrary intercept and slope; and (ii) taxation is non-linear and unrestricted as in Mirrleesian models. Our main result provides conditions for perfect tax smoothing: marginal taxes on labor income should remain constant over time and invariant to shocks. In addition, capital should not be taxed. We also discuss implications for optimal debt management. Finally, an extension highlights movements in the distribution of relative skills as a potential source for variations in optimal marginal tax rates.
- Keyword:
- Capital Taxation, Debt Management, Redistribution, Optimal Taxation, Tax Smoothing, and Time Inconsistency
- Subject (JEL):
- E62 - Fiscal Policy, H20 - Taxation, Subsidies, and Revenue: General, and H63 - National Debt; Debt Management; Sovereign Debt
- Creator:
- Christiano, Lawrence J. and Harrison, Sharon G.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 214
- Abstract:
We study a one-sector growth model which is standard except for the presence of an externality in the production function. The set of competitive equilibria is large. It includes constant equilibria, sunspot equilibria, cyclical and chaotic equilibria, and equilibria with deterministic or stochastic regime switching. The efficient allocation is characterized by constant employment and a constant growth rate. We identify an income tax-subsidy schedule that supports the efficient allocation as the unique equilibrium outcome. That schedule has two properties: (i) it specifies the tax rate to be an increasing function of aggregate employment, and (ii) earnings are subsidized when aggregate employment is at its efficient level. The first feature eliminates inefficient, fluctuating equilibria, while the second induces agents to internalize the externality.
- Keyword:
- Fiscal policy, Multiple equilibria, Stabilization, Regime switching, and Business cycle
- Subject (JEL):
- E13 - General Aggregative Models: Neoclassical, E32 - Business Fluctuations; Cycles, and E62 - Fiscal Policy
- Creator:
- Cole, Harold Linh, 1957-; Ohanian, Lee E.; Riascos, Alvaro; and Schmitz, James Andrew
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 351
- Abstract:
Latin American countries are the only Western countries that are poor and that aren’t gaining ground on the United States. This paper evaluates why Latin America has not replicated Western economic success. We find that this failure is primarily due to TFP differences. Latin America’s TFP gap is not plausibly accounted for by human capital differences, but rather reflects inefficient production. We argue that competitive barriers are a promising channel for understanding low Latin TFP. We document that Latin America has many more international and domestic competitive barriers than do Western and successful East Asian countries. We also document a number of microeconomic cases in Latin America in which large reductions in competitive barriers increase productivity to Western levels.
- Keyword:
- Latin America
- Subject (JEL):
- N26 - Economic History: Financial Markets and Institutions: Latin America; Caribbean and N20 - Economic History: Financial Markets and Institutions: General, International, or Comparative
- Creator:
- Fogli, Alessandra and Veldkamp, Laura
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 572
- Abstract:
Does the pattern of social connections between individuals matter for macroeconomic outcomes? If so, where do these differences come from and how large are their effects? Using network analysis tools, we explore how different social network structures affect technology diffusion and thereby a country's rate of growth. The correlation between high-diffusion networks and income is strongly positive. But when we use a model to isolate the effect of a change in social networks, the effect can be positive, negative, or zero. The reason is that networks diffuse ideas and disease. Low-diffusion networks have evolved in countries where disease is prevalent because limited connectivity protects residents from epidemics. But a low-diffusion network in a low-disease environment needlessly compromises the diffusion of good ideas. In general, social networks have evolved to fit their economic and epidemiological environment. Trying to change networks in one country to mimic those in a higher-income country may well be counterproductive.
- Keyword:
- Pathogens, Growth, Technology diffusion, Disease , Social networks, Economic networks, and Development
- Subject (JEL):
- E02 - Institutions and the Macroeconomy, O10 - Economic Development: General, I10 - Health: General, and O33 - Technological Change: Choices and Consequences; Diffusion Processes
- Creator:
- Chari, V. V.; Kehoe, Patrick J.; and McGrattan, Ellen R.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 328
- Abstract:
We propose a simple method to help researchers develop quantitative models of economic fluctuations. The method rests on the insight that many models are equivalent to a prototype growth model with time-varying wedges which resemble productivity, labor and investment taxes, and government consumption. Wedges corresponding to these variables—efficiency, labor, investment, and government consumption wedges—are measured and then fed back into the model in order to assess the fraction of various fluctuations they account for. Applying this method to U.S. data for the Great Depression and the 1982 recession reveals that the efficiency and labor wedges together account for essentially all of the fluctuations; the investment wedge plays a decidedly tertiary role, and the government consumption wedge, none. Analyses of the entire postwar period and alternative model specifications support these results. Models with frictions manifested primarily as investment wedges are thus not promising for the study of business cycles. (See Additional Material for a response to Christiano and Davis (2006).)
- Keyword:
- Sticky wages, Sticky prices, Productivity decline, Equivalence theorems, Capacity utilization, Financial frictions, and Great Depression
- Subject (JEL):
- E12 - General Aggregative Models: Keynes; Keynesian; Post-Keynesian and E10 - General Aggregative Models: General
- Creator:
- Chari, V. V.; Kehoe, Patrick J.; and Prescott, Edward C.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 115
- Abstract:
No abstract available.
- Creator:
- Green, Edward J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 144
- Abstract:
Intuitively, a patient trader should be able to make his trading partners compete to reveal whatever information is relevant to their transactions with him. This possibility is examined in the context of a model resembling that of Gale (1986). The main result is that, under assumptions having to do with asset structure and spanning, incentive-compatible elicitation of trading partners’ knowledge is feasible.
- Creator:
- Nosal, Ed; Rogerson, Richard Donald; and Wright, Randall, 1956-
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 131
- Abstract:
A classic result in the theory of implicit contract models with asymmetric information is that “underemployment” results if and only if leisure is an inferior good. We introduce household production into the standard implicit contract model and show that we can have underemployment at the same time that leisure is a normal good.
- Creator:
- Atkeson, Andrew and Ríos-Rull, José-Víctor
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 212
- Abstract:
In this paper we develop a model in which a country faces a balance of payments crisis if constraints on its international borrowing bind. We use the model to describe the dynamics of the trade balance, capital account, and balance of payments of a country that borrows to finance consumption following sweeping macroeconomic and structural reforms and then hits constraints on its international borrowing. We compare the predictions of this theoretical example with events in Mexico from 1987 through 1995.
- Keyword:
- Balance of payments, International borrowing, Exchange rate crises, and Speculative attacks
- Subject (JEL):
- F31 - Foreign Exchange and F34 - International Lending and Debt Problems
- Creator:
- Parente, Stephen L. and Prescott, Edward C.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 236
- Abstract:
Our thesis is that poor countries are poor because they employ arrangements for which the equilibrium outcomes are characterized by inferior technologies being used, and being used inefficiently. In this paper, we analyze the consequences of one such arrangement. In each industry, the arrangement enables a coalition of factor suppliers to be the monopoly seller of its input services to all firms using a particular production process. We find that the inefficiencies associated with this monopoly arrangement can be large. Whereas other studies have found that inefficiencies induced by monopoly are at most a few percent of output, we find that eliminating this monopoly arrangement could well increase output by roughly a factor of 3 without any increase in inputs.
- Subject (JEL):
- O41 - One, Two, and Multisector Growth Models, O11 - Macroeconomic Analyses of Economic Development, and D58 - Computable and Other Applied General Equilibrium Models
- Creator:
- Eaton, Jonathan; Kortum, Samuel; and Kramarz, Francis
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 332
- Abstract:
We examine entry across 113 national markets in 16 different industries using a comprehensive data set of French manufacturing firms. The data are unique in indicating how much each firm exports to each destination. Looking across all manufacturers: (1) Firms differ substantially in export participation, with most selling only at home; (2) The number of firms selling to multiple markets falls off with the number of destinations with an elasticity of –2.5; (3) Decomposing French exports to each destination into the size of the market and French share, variation in market share translates nearly completely into firm entry while about 60 percent of the variation in market size is reflected in firm entry. Looking within each of 16 industries we find little variation in these patterns. We propose that any successful model of trade and market structure must confront these facts.
- Keyword:
- Furniture industry, Exports, Metals industries, ndustrial market , International trade, Market share, Tobacco industry, Industrial chemistry, Industrial machinery, and Heavy industry
- Subject (JEL):
- L11 - Production, Pricing, and Market Structure; Size Distribution of Firms, F14 - Empirical Studies of Trade, and L60 - Industry Studies: Manufacturing: General
- Creator:
- Luttmer, Erzo G. J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 440
- Abstract:
The Pareto-like tail of the size distribution of firms can arise from random growth of productivity or stochastic accumulation of capital. If the shocks that give rise to firm growth are perfectly correlated within a firm, then the growth rates of small and large firms are equally volatile, contrary to what is found in the data. If firm growth is the result of many independent shocks within a firm, it can take hundreds of years for a few large firms to emerge. This paper describes an economy with both types of shocks that can account for the thick-tailed firm size distribution, high entry and exit rates, and the relatively young age of large firms. The economy is one in which aggregate growth is driven by the creation of new products by both new and incumbent firms. Some new firms have better ideas than others and choose to implement those ideas at a more rapid pace. Eventually, such firms slow down when the quality of their ideas reverts to the mean. As in the data, average growth rates in a cross section of firms will appear to be independent of firm size, for all but the smallest firms.
- Keyword:
- Aggregate growth, Gibrat’s law, and Firm size distribution
- Subject (JEL):
- L10 - Market Structure, Firm Strategy, and Market Performance: General and O40 - Economic Growth and Aggregate Productivity: General
- Creator:
- Alvarez, Fernando, 1964-; Atkeson, Andrew; and Kehoe, Patrick J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 278
- Abstract:
This paper analyzes the effects of money injections on interest rates and exchange rates in a model in which agents must pay a Baumol-Tobin style fixed cost to exchange bonds and money. Asset markets are endogenously segmented because this fixed cost leads agents to trade bonds and money only infrequently. When the government injects money through an open market operation, only those agents that are currently trading absorb these injections. Through their impact on these agents’ consumption, these money injections affect real interest rates and real exchange rates. We show that the model generates the observed negative relation between expected inflation and real interest rates. With moderate amounts of segmentation, the model also generates other observed features of the data: persistent liquidity effects in interest rates and volatile and persistent exchange rates. A standard model with no fixed costs can produce none of these features.
- Keyword:
- Baumol-Tobin model, Liquidity effects, Term structure of interest rates, Fixed costs, and Volatile real exchange rates
- Subject (JEL):
- F41 - Open Economy Macroeconomics, E40 - Money and Interest Rates: General, E43 - Interest Rates: Determination, Term Structure, and Effects, E52 - Monetary Policy, and F31 - Foreign Exchange
652. A Note on Maximum Likelihood Estimation of the Rational Expectations Model of the Term Structure
- Creator:
- Sargent, Thomas J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 026
- Abstract:
No abstract available.
- Creator:
- Chari, V. V.; Jagannathan, Ravi; and Ofer, Aharon R.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 110
- Abstract:
An examination of the behavior of stock returns around quarterly earnings announcement dates finds a seasonal pattern: small firms show large positive abnormal returns and a sizable increase in the variability of returns around these dates. Only part of the large abnormal returns can be accounted for by the fact that firms with good news tend to announce early. Large firms show no abnormal returns around announcement dates and a much smaller increase in variability.
- Creator:
- Phelan, Christopher
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 283
- Abstract:
This paper presents a simple model of government reputation which captures two characteristics of policy outcomes in less developed countries: governments which betray public trust do so erratically, and, after a betrayal, public trust is regained only gradually.
- Keyword:
- Government reputation
- Subject (JEL):
- H20 - Taxation, Subsidies, and Revenue: General and C73 - Stochastic and Dynamic Games; Evolutionary Games; Repeated Games
- Creator:
- Cubeddu, Luis M. and Ríos-Rull, José-Víctor
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 235
- Abstract:
Between the sixties and the late eighties the percentages of low-saving single-parent households and people living alone have grown dramatically at the expense of high-saving married households, while the household saving rate has declined equally dramatically. A preliminary analysis of population composition and savings by household type seems to indicate that about half of the decline in savings is due to demographic change. We construct a model with agents changing marital status, but where the saving behavior of the households can adjust to the properties of the demographic process. We find that the demographic changes that reduce the number of married households (mainly higher divorce and higher illegitimacy) induce all household types to save more and that the effect on the aggregate saving rate is minuscule. We conclude that the drop in savings since the sixties is not due to changes in household composition.
- Creator:
- Green, Edward J. and Oh, Soo-Nam
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 143
- Abstract:
The paper compares implications of three kinds of models of households’ consumption behavior: the basic permanent-income model, several models of liquidity-constrained households, and a model of an informationally-constrained efficient contract. These models are distinguished in terms of implications regarding the present discounted values of net trades to households at various levels of temporary income, and the households’ marginal rates of substitution. Martingale consumption is studied as an approximation to the predicted consumption process of the efficient-contract model.
- Creator:
- Berger, David; Herkenhoff, Kyle F.; and Mongey, Simon
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 597
- Abstract:
We extend the baseline Susceptible-Exposed-Infectious-Recovered (SEIR) infectious disease epidemiology model to understand the role of testing and case-dependent quarantine. Our model nests the SEIR model. During a period of asymptomatic infection, testing can reveal infection that otherwise would only be revealed later when symptoms develop. Along with those displaying symptoms, such individuals are deemed known positive cases. Quarantine policy is case-dependent in that it can depend on whether a case is unknown, known positive, known negative, or recovered. Testing therefore makes possible the identification and quarantine of infected individuals and release of non-infected individuals. We fix a quarantine technology - a parameter determining the differential rate of transmission in quarantine - and compare simple testing and quarantine policies. We start with a baseline quarantine-only policy that replicates the rate at which individuals are entering quarantine in the US in March, 2020. We show that the total deaths that occur under this policy can be achieved under looser quarantine measures and a substantial increase in random testing of asymptomatic individuals. Testing at a higher rate in conjunction with targeted quarantine policies can (i) dampen the economic impact of the coronavirus and (ii) reduce peak symptomatic infections - relevant for hospital capacity constraints. Our model can be plugged into richer quantitative extensions of the SEIR model of the kind currently being used to forecast the effects of public health and economic policies.
- Keyword:
- coronavirus and COVID-19
- Subject (JEL):
- C00 - Mathematical and Quantitative Methods: General
- Creator:
- Amador, Manuel and Phelan, Christopher
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 564
- Abstract:
This paper presents a continuous-time model of sovereign debt. In it, a relatively impatient sovereign government’s hidden type switches back and forth between a commitment type, which cannot default, and an optimizing type, which can default on the country’s debt at any time, and assume outside lenders have particular beliefs regarding how a commitment type should borrow for any given level of debt and bond price. We show that if these beliefs satisfy reasonable assumptions, in any Markov equilibrium, the optimizing type mimics the commitment type when borrowing, revealing its type only by defaulting on its debt at random times. Further, in such Markov equilibria (the solution to a simple pair of ordinary differential equations), there are positive gross issuances at all dates, constant net imports as long as there is a positive equilibrium probability that the government is the optimizing type, and net debt repayment only by the commitment type. For countries that have recently defaulted, the interest rate the country pays on its debt is a decreasing function of the amount of time since its last default, and its total debt is an increasing function of the amount of time since its last default. For countries that have not recently defaulted, interest rates are constant.
- Keyword:
- Sovereign debt, Debt intolerance, Sovereign default, Learning, Serial defaulters, and Reputation
- Subject (JEL):
- F34 - International Lending and Debt Problems
- Creator:
- Bryant, John B.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 054
- Abstract:
According to the folklore of economics, game theory has failed. This paper argues that that is an incorrect interpretation of the game theory literature. When faced with a well-posed problem, game theory provides a solution. When faced with an ill-posed problem, game theory fails to provide a solution. This is, indeed, the best one can hope for from a method of analysis! Further, some suggestions are made for facing game theory with well-posed economic problems.
- Creator:
- Holmes, Thomas J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 298
- Abstract:
What is the force of attraction of cities? Leading explanations include the advantages of a concentrated market and knowledge spillovers. This paper develops a model of firm location decisions in which it is possible to distinguish the importance of the concentrated-market motive from other motives, including knowledge spillovers. A key aspect of the model is that it allows for the firm to choose multiple locations. The theory is applied to study the placement of manufacturing sales offices. The implications of the concentrated-market motive are found to be a salient feature of U.S. Census micro data. The structural parameters of the model are estimated. The concentrated-market motive is found to account for approximately half of the concentration of sales offices in large cities.
- Creator:
- Cole, Harold Linh, 1957- and Kocherlakota, Narayana Rao, 1963-
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 238
- Abstract:
We consider an environment in which individuals receive income shocks that are unobservable to others and can privately store resources. We provide a simple characterization of the efficient allocation in cases in which the rate of return on storage is sufficiently high or, alternatively, in which the worst possible outcome is sufficiently dire. We show that, unlike in environments without unobservable storage, the symmetric efficient allocation is decentralizable through a competitive asset market in which individuals trade risk-free bonds among themselves.
- Creator:
- Hinich, Melvin J. and Weber, Warren E.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 096
- Abstract:
In this paper we present a consistent estimator for a linear filter (distributed lag) when the independent variable is subject to observational error. Unlike the standard errors-in-variables estimator which uses instrumental variables, our estimator works directly with observed data. It is based on the Hilbert transform relationship between the phase and the log gain of a minimum phase-lag linear filter. The results of using our method to estimate a known filter and to estimate the relationship between consumption and income demonstrate that the method performs quite well even when the noise-to-signal ratio for the observed independent variable is large. We also develop a criterion for determining whether an estimated phase function is minimum phase-lag.
- Keyword:
- Linear filter, Hilbert transform, Minimum phase-lag, Phase unwrapping, and Errors-in-variables
- Creator:
- Filson, Darren, 1969- and Franco, April
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 272
- Abstract:
In high-tech industries, one important method of diffusion is through employee mobility: many of the entering firms are started by employees from incumbent firms using some of their former employers’ technological know-how. This paper explores the effect of incorporating this mechanism in a general industry framework by allowing employees to imitate their employers’ know-how. The equilibrium is Pareto optimal since the employees “pay” for the possibility of learning their employers’ know-how. The model’s implications are consistent with data from the rigid disk drive industry. These implications concern the effects of know-how on firm formation and survival.
- Keyword:
- Techonological Change, Research and Development, Innovation, Rigid Disk Drive, Industry Dynamics, Diffusion, and Spinout
- Subject (JEL):
- L11 - Production, Pricing, and Market Structure; Size Distribution of Firms, O31 - Innovation and Invention: Processes and Incentives, L63 - Microelectronics; Computers; Communications Equipment, and J24 - Human Capital; Skills; Occupational Choice; Labor Productivity
- Creator:
- Greenwood, Jeremy, 1953- and Williamson, Stephen D.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 112
- Abstract:
This paper presents a two-country overlapping generations model in which financial intermediation arises endogenously as an incentive-compatible means of economizing on monitoring costs. Because of the existence of transactions costs, money markets in the two countries are segmented and investors have differential access to international credit markets. The model is used to generate predictions about the role of international intermediation in economic development and to examine the nature of business cycle phenomena across alternative exchange rate regimes. Disturbances are propagated by a credit allocation mechanism, which also lends a novel flavor to the model’s long-run properties.
- Creator:
- Gowrisankaran, Gautam and Holmes, Thomas J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 264
- Abstract:
Will an industry with no antitrust policy converge to monopoly, competition or somewhere in between? We analyze this question using a dynamic dominant firm model with rational agents, endogenous mergers and constant returns to scale production. We find that perfect competition and monopoly are always steady states of this model and that there may be other steady states with a dominant firm and a fringe co-existing. Mergers are likely only when supply is inelastic or demand is elastic, suggesting that the ability of a dominant firm to raise price through monopolization is limited. Additionally, as the discount rate increases, it becomes harder to monopolize the industry, because the dominant firm cannot commit to not raising prices in the future.
- Keyword:
- Dominant Firm, Dynamics, and Merger
- Subject (JEL):
- L12 - Monopoly; Monopolization Strategies and L41 - Monopolization; Horizontal Anticompetitive Practices
- Creator:
- McKay, Alisdair and Wieland, Johannes F.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 622
- Abstract:
The prevailing neo-Wicksellian view holds that the central bank's objective is to track the natural rate of interest (r *), which itself is largely exogenous to monetary policy. We challenge this view using a fixed-cost model of durable consumption demand, in which expansionary monetary policy prompts households to accelerate purchases of durable goods. This yields an intertemporal trade-off in aggregate demand as encouraging households to increase durable holdings today leaves fewer households acquiring durables going forward. Interest rates must be kept low to support demand going forward, so accommodative monetary policy today reduces r * in the future. We show that this mechanism is quantitatively important in explaining the persistently low level of real interest rates and r * after the Great Recession.
- Keyword:
- Interest rates, Monetary policy, and Durable goods
- Subject (JEL):
- E52 - Monetary Policy, E43 - Interest Rates: Determination, Term Structure, and Effects, and E21 - Macroeconomics: Consumption; Saving; Wealth
- Creator:
- Dinkelman, Taryn and Schulhofer-Wohl, Sam
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 506
- Abstract:
The direct benefits of infrastructure in developing countries can be large, but if new infrastructure induces in-migration, congestion of other local publicly provided goods may offset the direct benefits. Using the example of rural household electrification in South Africa, we demonstrate the importance of accounting for migration when evaluating welfare gains of spatial programs. We also provide a practical approach to computing welfare gains that does not rely on land prices. We develop a location choice model that incorporates missing land markets and allows for congestion in local land. Using this model, we construct welfare bounds as a function of the income and population effects of the new electricity infrastructure. A novel prediction from the model is that migration elasticities and congestion effects are especially large when land markets are missing. We empirically estimate these welfare bounds for rural electrification in South Africa and show that congestion externalities from program-induced migration reduced local welfare gains by about 40%.
- Keyword:
- Migration, Congestion, Program evaluation, Welfare, Rural infrastructure, and South Africa
- Subject (JEL):
- H43 - Project Evaluation; Social Discount Rate, O18 - Economic Development: Urban, Rural, Regional, and Transportation Analysis; Housing; Infrastructure, H54 - National Government Expenditures and Related Policies: Infrastructures; Other Public Investment and Capital Stock, R13 - General Equilibrium and Welfare Economic Analysis of Regional Economies, H23 - Taxation and Subsidies: Externalities; Redistributive Effects; Environmental Taxes and Subsidies, and O15 - Economic Development: Human Resources; Human Development; Income Distribution; Migration
- Creator:
- Henczel, Don
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 017
- Abstract:
No abstract available.
671. Minimax-Nash
- Creator:
- Bryant, John B.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 052
- Abstract:
An alternative solution concept is recommended for noncooperative games with multiple equilibra. Players maximize security level in a contracted game. Examples in economics are given in which this solution concept yields a unique solution: a fiat money model, the capital overaccumulation problem, and multiple rational expectations equilibria generally.
- Creator:
- McCabe, Kevin A.; Mukherji, Arijit; and Runkle, David Edward
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 176
- Abstract:
We report on experiments that tested the predictions of competing theories of learning in games. Experimental subjects played a version of the three-person matching-pennies game. The unique mixed-strategy Nash equilibrium of this game is locally unstable under naive Bayesian learning. Sophisticated Bayesian learning predicts that expectations will converge to Nash equilibrium if players observe the entire history of play. Neither theory requires payoffs to be common knowledge. We develop maximum-likelihood tests for the independence conditions implied by the mixed-strategy Nash equilibrium. We find that perfect monitoring was sufficient and complete payoff information was unnecessary for average play to be consistent with the equilibrium (as is predicted by sophisticated Bayesian learning). When subjects had imperfect monitoring and incomplete payoff information, average play was inconsistent with the equilibrium.
- Creator:
- Cole, Harold Linh, 1957- and Ohanian, Lee E.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 270
- Abstract:
This paper quantitatively evaluates the hypothesis that deflation can account for much of the Great Depression (1929–33). We examine two popular explanations of the Depression: (1) The “high wage” story, according to which deflation, combined with imperfectly flexible wages, raised real wages and reduced employment and output. (2) The “bank failure” story, according to which deflationary money shocks contributed to bank failures and to a reduction in the efficiency of financial intermediation, which in turn reduced lending and output. We evaluate these stories using general equilibrium business cycle models, and find that wage shocks and banking shocks account for a small fraction of the Great Depression. We also find that some other predictions of the theories are at variance with the data.
- Creator:
- Jones, Larry E.; Manuelli, Rodolfo E.; and Siu, Henry E.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 271
- Abstract:
We present a class of convex endogenous growth models and analyze their performance in terms of both growth and business cycle criteria. The models we study have close analogs in the real business cycle literature. We interpret the exogenous growth rate of productivity as an endogenous growth rate of human capital. This perspective allows us to compare the strengths of the two classes of models.
To highlight the mechanism that gives endogenous growth models the ability to improve upon their exogenous growth relatives, we study models that are symmetric in terms of human and physical capital formation—our two engines of growth. More precisely, we analyze models in which the technology used to produce human capital is identical to the technologies used to produce consumption and investment goods and in which the technology shocks in the two sectors are perfectly correlated.
- Subject (JEL):
- D90 - Micro-Based Behavioral Economics: General and E32 - Business Fluctuations; Cycles
- Creator:
- Doepke, Matthias and Zilibotti, Fabrizio
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 354
- Abstract:
We develop a positive theory of the adoption of child labor laws. Workers who compete with children in the labor market support the introduction of a child labor ban, unless their own working children provide a large fraction of family income. Since child labor income depends on family size, fertility decisions lock agents into specific political preferences, and multiple steady states can arise. The introduction of child labor laws can be triggered by skill-biased technological change that induces parents to choose smaller families. The model replicates features of the history of the U.K. in the nineteenth century, when regulations were introduced after a period of rising wage inequality, and coincided with rapidly declining fertility rates.
- Keyword:
- Voting, Fertility, Child Labor, and Inequality
- Subject (JEL):
- J13 - Fertility; Family Planning; Child Care; Children; Youth, J82 - Labor Standards: Labor Force Composition, and J24 - Human Capital; Skills; Occupational Choice; Labor Productivity
- Creator:
- Kehoe, Patrick J.; Midrigan, Virgiliu; and Pastorino, Elena
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 566
- Abstract:
Modern business cycle theory focuses on the study of dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models that generate aggregate fluctuations similar to those experienced by actual economies. We discuss how this theory has evolved from its roots in the early real business cycle models of the late 1970s through the turmoil of the Great Recession four decades later. We document the strikingly different pattern of comovements of macro aggregates during the Great Recession compared to other postwar recessions, especially the 1982 recession. We then show how two versions of the latest generation of real business cycle models can account, respectively, for the aggregate and the cross-regional fluctuations observed in the Great Recession in the United States.
- Keyword:
- External validation, Financial frictions, and New Keynesian models
- Subject (JEL):
- E32 - Business Fluctuations; Cycles, E61 - Policy Objectives; Policy Designs and Consistency; Policy Coordination, E52 - Monetary Policy, and E13 - General Aggregative Models: Neoclassical
- Creator:
- Fernandez, Raquel, 1959- and Fogli, Alessandra
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 361
- Abstract:
We study the effect of culture on important economic outcomes by using the 1970 census to examine the work and fertility behavior of women born in the U.S. but whose parents were born elsewhere. We use past female labor force participation and total fertility rates from the country of ancestry as our cultural proxies. These variables should capture, in addition to past economic and institutional conditions, the beliefs commonly held about the role of women in society (i.e., culture). Given the different time and place, only the beliefs embodied in the cultural proxies should be potentially relevant. We show that these cultural proxies have positive and significant explanatory power for individual work and fertility outcomes, even after controlling for possible indirect effects of culture. We examine alternative hypotheses for these positive correlations and show that neither unobserved human capital nor networks are likely to be responsible.
- Keyword:
- Female labor force participation, Family, Cultural transmission, Neighborhoods, Networks, Fertility, and Immigrants
- Subject (JEL):
- J16 - Economics of Gender; Non-labor Discrimination, Z13 - Economic Sociology; Economic Anthropology; Language; Social and Economic Stratification, J13 - Fertility; Family Planning; Child Care; Children; Youth, J22 - Time Allocation and Labor Supply, and J24 - Human Capital; Skills; Occupational Choice; Labor Productivity
- Creator:
- Litterman, Robert B.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 078
- Abstract:
This paper illustrates the application of observable index models to the problem of macroeconomic forecasting. In this context, a Bayesian prior is used to describe a class of models which impose the index structure with more or less weight. An out-of-sample forecasting experiment is used to measure the possible benefits of this approach. In addition, impulse response functions and the decomposition of forecast variance are analyzed to suggest a possible separation of real and nominal shocks into separate channels.
- Creator:
- Holmes, Thomas J. and Schmitz, James Andrew
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 184
- Abstract:
Why are methods of production used in an area when more “efficient” methods are available? This paper explores a “resistance to technology” explanation. In particular, the paper attempts to understand why some industries, like the construction industry, have had continued success in blocking new methods, while others have met failure, like the dairy industry's recent attempt to block bST. We develop a model which shows that how easily goods move between areas determines in part the extent of resistance to new methods in an area.
- Creator:
- Kocherlakota, Narayana Rao, 1963-
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 275
- Abstract:
In this paper, I provide a possible explanation of why nominally risk-free bonds are essential in monetary economies. I argue that the role of nominal bonds is to serve as record-keeping devices in intertemporal exchanges of money. I show that bonds can only serve this role if they are illiquid (costly to exchange for goods). Finally, I show that in economies in which nominal bonds are essential, welfare and nominal interest rates are both positively associated with the supply of illiquid bonds (if that supply is small).
- Keyword:
- Money and Nominal bonds
- Subject (JEL):
- E58 - Central Banks and Their Policies, E42 - Monetary Systems; Standards; Regimes; Government and the Monetary System; Payment Systems, and C78 - Bargaining Theory; Matching Theory
- Creator:
- Echevarria, Cristina and Merlo, Antonio
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 195
- Abstract:
We interpret observed gender differences in education as the equilibrium outcome of a two-sex overlapping generations model where men and women of each generation bargain over consumption, number of children, and investment in education of their children conditional on gender. This model represents a new framework for the analysis of the process of intrahousehold decision making in an intergenerational setting.
- Creator:
- Mercenier, Jean and Yeldan, Erinç, 1960-
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 207
- Abstract:
We highlight an example of considerable bias in officially published input-output data (factor-income shares) by an LDC (Turkey), which many researchers use without question. We make use of an intertemporal general equilibrium model of trade and production to evaluate the dynamic gains for Turkey from currently debated trade policy options and compare the predictions using conservatively adjusted, rather than official, data on factor shares. We show that the predicted welfare gains are not only of a different order of magnitude, but in some cases, of a different sign, hence, suggesting contradictory policy recommendations.
- Creator:
- McGrattan, Ellen R.; Rogerson, Richard Donald; and Wright, Randall, 1956-
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 191
- Abstract:
We estimate a dynamic general equilibrium model of the U.S. economy that includes an explicit household production sector and stochastic fiscal variables. We use our estimates to investigate two issues. First, we analyze how well the model accounts for aggregate fluctuations. We find that household production has a significant impact and reject a nested specification in which changes in the home production technology do not matter for market variables. Second, we study the effects of some simple fiscal policy experiments and show that the model generates different predictions for the effects of tax changes than similar models without home production.
- Creator:
- Chari, V. V.; Christiano, Lawrence J.; and Kehoe, Patrick J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 158
- Abstract:
We find conditions for the Friedman rule to be optimal in three standard models of money. These conditions are homotheticity and separability assumptions on preferences similar to those in the public finance literature on optimal uniform commodity taxation. We show that there is no connection between our results and the result in the standard public finance literature that intermediate goods should not be taxed.
- Keyword:
- Ramsey policy, Inflation tax, and Optimal monetary policy
- Subject (JEL):
- E63 - Comparative or Joint Analysis of Fiscal and Monetary Policy; Stabilization; Treasury Policy, E61 - Policy Objectives; Policy Designs and Consistency; Policy Coordination, and E52 - Monetary Policy
- Creator:
- Kehoe, Patrick J.; Lopez, Pierlauro; Midrigan, Virgiliu; and Pastorino, Elena
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 591
- Abstract:
Recent critiques have demonstrated that existing attempts to account for the unemployment volatility puzzle of search models are inconsistent with the procylicality of the opportunity cost of employment, the cyclicality of wages, and the volatility of risk-free rates. We propose a model that is immune to these critiques and solves this puzzle by allowing for preferences that generate time-varying risk over the cycle, and so account for observed asset pricing fluctuations, and for human capital accumulation on the job, consistent with existing estimates of returns to labor market experience. Our model reproduces the observed fluctuations in unemployment because hiring a worker is a risky investment with long-duration surplus flows. Intuitively, since the price of risk in our model sharply increases in recessions as observed in the data, the benefit from creating new matches greatly drops, leading to a large decline in job vacancies and an increase in unemployment of the same magnitude as in the data.
- Keyword:
- Search and matching model, Diamond-Mortenson-Pissarides model, Search model, Shimer puzzle, and Unemployment volatility puzzle
- Subject (JEL):
- E24 - Employment; Unemployment; Wages; Intergenerational Income Distribution; Aggregate Human Capital; Aggregate Labor Productivity, J63 - Labor Turnover; Vacancies; Layoffs, E20 - Consumption, Saving, Production, Investment, Labor Markets, and Informal Economy: General (includes Measurement and Data), E32 - Business Fluctuations; Cycles, E00 - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics: General, J60 - Mobility, Unemployment, Vacancies, and Immigrant Workers: General, and J64 - Unemployment: Models, Duration, Incidence, and Job Search
- Creator:
- Kaplan, Greg
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 449
- Abstract:
This paper uses an estimated structural model to argue that the option to move in and out of the parental home is an important insurance channel against labor market risk for youths who do not attend college. Using data from the NLSY97, I construct a new monthly panel of parent-youth coresidence outcomes and use it to document an empirical relationship between these movements and individual labor market events. The data is then used to estimate the parameters of a dynamic game between youths and their altruistic parents, featuring coresidence, labor supply and savings decisions. Parents can provide both monetary support through explicit financial transfers, and non-monetary support in the form of shared residence. To account for the data, two types of exogenous shocks are needed. Preference shocks are found to explain most of the cross-section of living arrangements, while labor market shocks account for individual movements in and out of the parental home. I use the model to show that coresidence is a valuable form of insurance, particularly for youths from poorer families. The option to live at home also helps to explain features of aggregate data for low-skilled young workers: their low savings rates and their relatively small consumption responses to labor market shocks. An important implication is that movements in and out of home can reduce the consumption smoothing benefits of social insurance programs.
- Creator:
- Bryant, John B.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 029
- Abstract:
No abstract available.
- Creator:
- Kareken, John H. and Wallace, Neil
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 016
- Abstract:
No abstract available.
- Creator:
- Bryant, John B.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 047
- Abstract:
Long-term contracts are explained as equilibrium strategies of supergames. In the specific coherent general equilibrium model provided, limited mobility of labor, in the form of a fixed cost of moving, generates long-term contracts.
- Creator:
- Roberds, William
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 111
- Abstract:
The consequences of a straightforward monetary targeting scheme are examined for a simple dynamic macro model. The notion of “targeting” used is the strategic one introduced by Rogoff (1985). Numerical calculations are used to demonstrate that for the model under consideration, monetary targeting is likely to lead to a deterioration of policy performance. These examples cast doubt upon the general efficacy of simple targeting schemes in dynamic rational expectations models.
- Creator:
- Perri, Fabrizio and Stefanidis, Georgios
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 554
- Abstract:
We use balance sheet data and stock market data for the major U.S. banking institutions during and after the 2007-8 financial crisis to estimate the magnitude of the losses experienced by these institutions because of the crisis. We then use these estimates to assess the impact of the crisis under alternative, and higher, capital requirements. We find that substantially higher capital requirements (in the 20% to 30% range) would have substantially reduced the vulnerability of these financial institutions, and consequently they would have significantly reduced the need of a public bailout.
- Keyword:
- Too big to fail and Financial crises
- Subject (JEL):
- G01 - Financial Crises and G21 - Banks; Depository Institutions; Micro Finance Institutions; Mortgages
- Creator:
- Christiano, Lawrence J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 106
- Abstract:
Deaton (1986) has noted that if income is a first-order autoregressive process in first differences, then a simple version of Friedman’s permanent income hypothesis (SPIH) implies that measured U.S. consumption is insufficiently sensitive to innovations in income. This paper argues that this implication of the SPIH is a consequence of the fact that it ignores the role of the substitution effect in the consumption decision. Using a parametric version of the standard model of economic growth, the paper shows that very small movements in interest rates are sufficient to induce an empirically plausible amount of consumption smoothing. Since an overall evaluation of the model’s explanation for the observed smoothness of consumption requires examining its implications for other aspects of the data, the paper also explores some of these.
- Creator:
- Litterman, Robert B. and Weiss, Laurence M.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 089
- Abstract:
This paper reexamines U.S. postwar data to investigate if the observed comovements between money, interest rates, inflation, and output are compatible with the money to real interest to output links suggested by existing monetary theories of the business cycle, which include both Keynesian and equilibrium models. We find these theories are incompatible with the data, and in light of these results, we propose an alternative structural model which can account for the major dynamic interactions among the variables. This model has two central features: (i) output is unaffected by the money supply; and (ii) the money supply process is influenced by policies designed to achieve short-run price stability.
- Creator:
- Chari, V. V. and Kehoe, Patrick J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 330
- Abstract:
The desirability of fiscal constraints in monetary unions depends critically on whether the monetary authority can commit to follow its policies. If it can commit, then debt constraints can only impose costs. If it cannot commit, then fiscal policy has a free-rider problem, and debt constraints may be desirable. This type of free-rider problem is new and arises only because of a time inconsistency problem.
- Subject (JEL):
- E58 - Central Banks and Their Policies, F42 - International Policy Coordination and Transmission, F41 - Open Economy Macroeconomics, E63 - Comparative or Joint Analysis of Fiscal and Monetary Policy; Stabilization; Treasury Policy, and F33 - International Monetary Arrangements and Institutions
- Creator:
- Williamson, Stephen D. and Wright, Randall, 1956-
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 141
- Abstract:
We analyze economies with private information concerning the quality of commodities. Without private information there is a nonmonetary equilibrium with only high quality commodities produced, and money cannot improve welfare. With private information there can be equilibria with bad quality commodities produced, and sometimes only nonmonetary equilibrium is degenerate. The use of money can lead to active (i.e., nondegenerate) equilibria when no active nonmonetary equilibrium exists. Even when active nonmonetary equilibria exist, with private information money can increase welfare via its incentive effects: in monetary equilibrium, agents may adopt trading strategies that discourage production of low quality output.
- Subject (JEL):
- D82 - Asymmetric and Private Information; Mechanism Design, E40 - Money and Interest Rates: General, and D83 - Search; Learning; Information and Knowledge; Communication; Belief; Unawareness
- Creator:
- Schulhofer-Wohl, Sam and Yang, Yang, 1975-
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 461
- Abstract:
This paper proposes a new way of modeling age, period, and cohort effects that improves substantively and methodologically on the conventional linear model. The linear model suffers from a well-known identification problem: If we assume an outcome of interest depends on the sum of an age effect, a period effect, and a cohort effect, then it is impossible to distinguish these three separate effects because, for any individual, birth year = current year – age. Less well appreciated is that the model also suffers from a conceptual problem: It assumes that the influence of age is the same in all time periods, the influence of present conditions is the same for people of all ages, and cohorts do not change over time. We argue that in many applications, these assumptions fail. We propose a more general model in which age profiles can change over time and period effects can have different influences on people of different ages. Our model defines cohort effects as an accumulation of age-by-period interactions. Although a long-standing literature on theories of social change conceptualizes cohort effects in exactly this way, we are the first to show how to statistically model this more complex form of cohort effects. We show that the additive model is a special case of our model and that, except in special cases, the parameters of the more general model are identified. We apply our model to analyze changes in age-specific mortality rates in Sweden over the past 150 years. Our model fits the data dramatically better than the additive model. The estimates show that the rate of increase of mortality with age among adults became more steep from 1881 to 1941, but since then the rate of increase has been roughly constant. The estimates also allow us to test whether early-life conditions have lasting impacts on mortality, as under the cohort morbidity phenotype hypothesis. The results give limited support to this hypothesis: The impact of early-life conditions lasts for several years but is unlikely to reach all the way to old age.
- Keyword:
- Cohort effects, Mortality, Sweden, Cohort morbidity phenotype hypothesis, and Age-period-cohort identification problem
- Subject (JEL):
- C23 - Single Equation Models; Single Variables: Panel Data Models; Spatio-temporal Models, I15 - Health and Economic Development, N33 - Economic History: Labor and Consumers, Demography, Education, Health, Welfare, Income, Wealth, Religion, and Philanthropy: Europe: Pre-1913, and J11 - Demographic Trends, Macroeconomic Effects, and Forecasts
- Creator:
- Rolnick, Arthur J., 1944- and Weber, Warren E.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 079
- Abstract:
In this paper we propose and test a new explanation of bank behavior during the Free Banking Era, 1837–63. Arguing against the view that free bank failures were due to fraud, we claim that they were caused by exposure to term structure risk. Testing this new explanation with a new and extensive body of data, we find strong support for it: periods of falling bond prices correspond to the periods with most of the free bank failures. The new data do not support the view that fraud caused the failures.
- Creator:
- McGrattan, Ellen R. and Prescott, Edward C.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 350
- Abstract:
In this paper, we show that ignoring corporate intangible investments gives a distorted picture of the post-1990 U.S. economy. In particular, ignoring intangible investments in the late 1990s leads one to conclude that productivity growth was modest, corporate profits were low, and corporate investment was at moderate levels. In fact, the late 1990s was a boom period for productivity growth, corporate profits, and corporate investment.
- Creator:
- Bassetto, Marco and Sargent, Thomas J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 599
- Abstract:
This paper describes interactions between monetary and fiscal policies that affect equilibrium price levels and interest rates by critically surveying theories about (a) optimal anticipated inflation, (b) optimal unanticipated inflation, and (c) conditions that secure a "nominal anchor" in the sense of a unique price level path. We contrast incomplete theories whose inputs are budget-feasible sequences of government issued bonds and money with complete theories whose inputs are bond-money strategies described as sequences of functions that map time t histories into time t government actions. We cite historical episodes that conform the theoretical insight that lines of authority between a Treasury and a Central Bank can be ambiguous, obscure, and fragile.
- Keyword:
- Monetary-fiscal coordination, Nominal anchor, Central Bank, and Government budget
- Subject (JEL):
- E62 - Fiscal Policy, E52 - Monetary Policy, E63 - Comparative or Joint Analysis of Fiscal and Monetary Policy; Stabilization; Treasury Policy, and E61 - Policy Objectives; Policy Designs and Consistency; Policy Coordination
- Creator:
- Kehoe, Timothy Jerome, 1953-; Pujolas, Pau S.; and Rossbach, Jack
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 537
- Abstract:
Applied general equilibrium (AGE) models, which feature multiple countries, multiple industries, and input-output linkages across industries, have been the dominant tool for evaluating the impact of trade reforms since the 1980s. We review how these models are used to perform policy analysis and document their shortcomings in predicting the industry-level effects of past trade reforms. We argue that, to improve their performance, AGE models need to incorporate product-level data on bilateral trade relations by industry and better model how trade reforms lower bilateral trade costs. We use the least traded products methodology of Kehoe et al. (2015) to provide guidance on how improvements can be made. We provide further suggestions on how AGE models can incorporate recent advances in quantitative trade theory to improve their predictive ability and better quantify the gains from trade liberalization.
- Keyword:
- Trade costs, Input-output linkages, Trade liberalization, Armington elasticities, and Applied general equilibrium
- Subject (JEL):
- F13 - Trade Policy; International Trade Organizations, F17 - Trade: Forecasting and Simulation, F11 - Neoclassical Models of Trade, and F14 - Empirical Studies of Trade