Search Constraints
Search Results
- 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