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- Creator:
- Velde, François R.; Weber, Warren E.; and Wright, Randall, 1956-
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 215
- Abstract:
We develop a model of commodity money and use it to analyze the following two questions motivated by issues in monetary history: What are the conditions under which Gresham’s Law holds? And, what are the mechanics of a debasement (lowering the metallic content of coins)? The model contains light and heavy coins, imperfect information, and prices determined via bilateral bargaining. There are equilibria with neither, both, or only one type of coin in circulation. When both circulate, coins may trade by weight or by tale. We discuss the extent to which Gresham’s Law holds in the various cases. Following a debasement, the quantity of reminting depends on the incentives offered by the sovereign. Equilibria exist with positive seigniorage and a mixture of old and new coins in circulation.
- Keyword:
- Gresham's Law, Asymmetric information, Commodity money, Random matching, and Debasement
- Subject (JEL):
- N10 - Economic History: Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics; Industrial Structure; Growth; Fluctuations: General, International, or Comparative and E42 - Monetary Systems; Standards; Regimes; Government and the Monetary System; Payment Systems
- Creator:
- McGrattan, Ellen R.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 454
- Abstract:
Empirical studies quantifying the economic effects of increased foreign direct investment (FDI) have not provided conclusive evidence that they are positive, as theory predicts. This paper shows that the lack of empirical evidence is consistent with theory if countries are in transition to FDI openness. Anticipated welfare gains lead to temporary declines in domestic investment and employment. Also, growth measures miss some intangible FDI, which is expensed from company profits. The reconciliation of theory and evidence is accomplished with a multicountry dynamic general equilibrium model parameterized with data from a sample of 104 countries during 1980–2005. Although no systematic benefits of FDI openness are found, the model demonstrates that the eventual gains in growth and welfare can be huge, especially for small countries.
- Keyword:
- Technology capital, Development, and Foreign direct investment
- Subject (JEL):
- O32 - Management of Technological Innovation and R&D, F23 - Multinational Firms; International Business, and F21 - International Investment; Long-term Capital Movements
883. Using Simulation Methods for Bayesian Econometric Models: Inference, Development, and Communication
- Creator:
- Geweke, John
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 249
- Abstract:
This paper surveys the fundamental principles of subjective Bayesian inference in econometrics and the implementation of those principles using posterior simulation methods. The emphasis is on the combination of models and the development of predictive distributions. Moving beyond conditioning on a fixed number of completely specified models, the paper introduces subjective Bayesian tools for formal comparison of these models with as yet incompletely specified models. The paper then shows how posterior simulators can facilitate communication between investigators (for example, econometricians) on the one hand and remote clients (for example, decision makers) on the other, enabling clients to vary the prior distributions and functions of interest employed by investigators. A theme of the paper is the practicality of subjective Bayesian methods. To this end, the paper describes publicly available software for Bayesian inference, model development, and communication and provides illustrations using two simple econometric models.
884. Shadow Insurance
- Creator:
- Koijen, Ralph S. J. and Yogo, Motohiro
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 505
- Abstract:
Liabilities ceded by life insurers to shadow reinsurers (i.e., less regulated and unrated off-balance-sheet entities) grew from $11 billion in 2002 to $364 billion in 2012. Life insurers using shadow insurance, which capture half of the market share, ceded 25 cents of every dollar insured to shadow reinsurers in 2012, up from 2 cents in 2002. Our adjustment for shadow insurance reduces risk-based capital by 53 percentage points (or 3 rating notches) and increases default probabilities by a factor of 3.5. We develop a structural model of the life insurance industry and estimate the impact of current policy proposals to limit or eliminate shadow insurance. In the counterfactual without shadow insurance, the average company using shadow insurance would raise prices by 10 to 21 percent, and annual life insurance underwritten would fall by 7 to 16 percent for the industry.
- Keyword:
- Reinsurance, Demand estimation, Regulatory arbitrage, Capital regulation, and Life insurance industry
- Subject (JEL):
- L11 - Production, Pricing, and Market Structure; Size Distribution of Firms, G22 - Insurance; Insurance Companies; Actuarial Studies, L51 - Economics of Regulation, and G28 - Financial Institutions and Services: Government Policy and Regulation
- Creator:
- Huo, Zhen and Ríos-Rull, José-Víctor
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 478
- Abstract:
We build a variation of the neoclassical growth model in which financial shocks to households or wealth shocks (in the sense of wealth destruction) generate recessions. Two standard ingredients that are necessary are (1) the existence of adjustment costs that make the expansion of the tradable goods sector difficult and (2) the existence of some frictions in the labor market that prevent enormous reductions in real wages (Nash bargaining in Mortensen-Pissarides labor markets is enough). We pose a new ingredient that greatly magnifies the recession: a reduction in consumption expenditures reduces measured productivity, while technology is unchanged due to reduced utilization of production capacity. Our model provides a novel, quantitative theory of the current recessions in southern Europe.
- Keyword:
- Great Recession, Endogenous productivity, and Paradox of thrift
- Subject (JEL):
- E20 - Consumption, Saving, Production, Investment, Labor Markets, and Informal Economy: General (includes Measurement and Data), F44 - International Business Cycles, and E32 - Business Fluctuations; Cycles
- Creator:
- Klette, Tor Jakob and Kortum, Samuel
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 300
- Abstract:
We develop a parsimonious model of innovating firms rich enough to confront firm-level evidence. It captures the dynamic behavior of individual heterogenous firms, describes the evolution of an industry with simultaneous entry and exit, and delivers a general equilibrium model of technological change. While unifying the theoretical analysis of firms, industries, and the aggregate economy, the model yields insights into empirical work on innovating firms. It accounts for the persistence over time of firms’ R&D investment, the concentration of R&D among incumbent firms, and the link between R&D and patenting. Furthermore, it explains why R&D as a fraction of revenues is strongly related to firm productivity yet largely unrelated to firm size or growth.
- Keyword:
- Birth and death processes, Market structure, Endogenous growth theory, Firm growth, R&D, and Productivity
- Subject (JEL):
- O31 - Innovation and Invention: Processes and Incentives and L11 - Production, Pricing, and Market Structure; Size Distribution of Firms
- Creator:
- Atkeson, Andrew
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 619
- Abstract:
I present a behavioral epidemiological model of the evolution of the COVID epidemic in the United States and the United Kingdom over the past 12 months. The model includes the introduction of a new, more contagious variant in the UK in early fall and the US in mid December. The model is behavioral in that activity, and thus transmission, responds endogenously to the daily death rate. I show that with only seasonal variation in the transmission rate and pandemic fatigue modeled as a one-time reduction in the semi-elasticity of the transmission rate to the daily death rate late in the year, the model can reproduce the evolution of daily and cumulative COVID deaths in the both countries from Feb 15, 2020 to the present remarkably well. I find that most of the end-of-year surge in deaths in both the US and the UK was generated by pandemic fatigue and not the new variant of the virus. I then generate forecasts for the evolution of the epidemic over the next two years with continuing seasonality, pandemic fatigue, and spread of the new variant.
- Keyword:
- COVID, Behavior, and Epidemics
- Subject (JEL):
- E17 - General Aggregative Models: Forecasting and Simulation: Models and Applications, I10 - Health: General, E10 - General Aggregative Models: General, and I18 - Health: Government Policy; Regulation; Public Health
- Creator:
- Kehoe, Timothy Jerome, 1953-
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 320
- Abstract:
This paper evaluates the performances of three of the most prominent multisectoral static applied general equilibrium models used to predict the impact of the North American Free Trade Agreement. These models drastically underestimated the impact of NAFTA on North American trade. Furthermore, the models failed to capture much of the relative impacts on different sectors. Ex-post performance evaluations of applied GE models are essential if policymakers are to have confidence in the results produced by these models. Such valuations also help make applied GE analysis a scientific discipline in which there are well-defined puzzles with clear successes and failures for competing theories. Analyzing sectoral trade data indicates the need for a new theoretical mechanism that generates large increases in trade in product categories with little or no previous trade. To capture changes in macroeconomic aggregates, the models need to be able to capture changes in productivity.
- Creator:
- Atkeson, Andrew and Burstein, Ariel
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 459
- Abstract:
We examine the quantitative impact of policy-induced changes in innovative investment by firms on growth in aggregate productivity and output in a model that nests several of the canonical models in the literature. We isolate two statistics, the impact elasticity of aggregate productivity growth with respect to an increase in aggregate innovative investment and the degree of intertemporal knowledge spillovers in research, that play a key role in shaping the model’s predicted dynamic response of aggregate productivity, output, and welfare to a policy-induced change in the innovation intensity of the economy. Given estimates of these statistics, we find that there is only modest scope for increasing aggregate productivity and output over a 20-year horizon with uniform subsidies to firms’ investments in innovation of a reasonable magnitude, but the welfare gains from such a subsidy may be substantial.
- Keyword:
- Economic growth, Social depreciation, and Innovation policies
- Subject (JEL):
- O40 - Economic Growth and Aggregate Productivity: General and O30 - Innovation; Research and Development; Technological Change; Intellectual Property Rights: General
- Creator:
- Aiyagari, S. Rao and McGrattan, Ellen R.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 203
- Abstract:
We find that the welfare gains to being at the optimum quantity of debt rather than the current U.S. level are small, and, therefore, concerns regarding the high level of debt in the U.S. economy may be misplaced. This finding is based on a model of a large number of infinitely-lived households whose saving behavior is influenced by precautionary saving motives and borrowing constraints. This model incorporates a different role for government debt than is found in standard models, and it captures different cost-benefit trade-offs. On the benefit side, government debt enhances the liquidity of households by providing an additional means of smoothing consumption and by effectively loosening borrowing constraints. On the cost side, the implied taxes have adverse wealth distribution and incentive effects. In addition, government debt crowds out capital via higher interest rates and lowers per capita consumption.
- Creator:
- Ordonez, Guillermo
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 429
- Abstract:
It is well known that movements in lending rates are asymmetric; they rise quickly and sharply, but fall slowly and gradually. Not known is the fact that the asymmetry is stronger the less developed a country’s financial system is. This new fact is here documented and explained in a model with an endogenous flow of information about economic conditions. The stronger asymmetry in less developed countries stems from their greater financial system frictions, such as monitoring and bankruptcy costs, which first magnify jumps of lending rates and then delay their recoveries by restricting the generation of information after the crisis. A quantitative exploration of the model shows the data are consistent with this explanation.
- Creator:
- Hansen, Lars Peter and Sargent, Thomas J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 072
- Abstract:
This paper reconsiders the aliasing problem of identifying the parameters of a continuous time stochastic process from discrete time data. It analyzes the extent to which restricting attention to processes with rational spectral density matrices reduces the number of observationally equivalent models. It focuses on rational specifications of spectral density matrices since rational parameterizations are commonly employed in the analysis of the time series data.
- Creator:
- Williamson, Stephen D. and Wright, Randall, 1956-
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 443
- Abstract:
The purpose of this paper is to discuss some of the models used in New Monetarist Economics, which is our label for a body of recent work on money, banking, payments systems, asset markets, and related topics. A key principle in New Monetarism is that solid microfoundations are critical for understanding monetary issues. We survey recent papers on monetary theory, showing how they build on common foundations. We then lay out a tractable benchmark version of the model that allows us to address a variety of issues. We use it to analyze some classic economic topics, like the welfare effects of inflation, the relationship between money and capital accumulation, and the Phillips curve. We also extend the benchmark model in new ways, and show how it can be used to generate new insights in the study of payments, banking, and asset markets.
- Keyword:
- New Monetarism, Monetary Policy, and Monetary Theory
- Subject (JEL):
- E10 - General Aggregative Models: General, E40 - Money and Interest Rates: General, E50 - Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit: General, and E00 - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics: General
- Creator:
- Correia, Isabel; Nicolini, Juan Pablo; and Teles, Pedro
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 403
- Abstract:
In this article, we analyze the implications of price-setting restrictions for the conduct of cyclical fiscal and monetary policy. We consider standard monetary economies that differ in the price-setting restrictions imposed on the firms. We show that, independently of the degree or type of price stickiness, it is possible to implement the same efficient set of allocations and that each allocation in that set is implemented with policies that are also independent of the price stickiness. In this sense, environments with different price-setting restrictions are equivalent.
- Keyword:
- Optimal fiscal and monetary policy and Sticky prices
- Subject (JEL):
- E58 - Central Banks and Their Policies, E40 - Money and Interest Rates: General, E63 - Comparative or Joint Analysis of Fiscal and Monetary Policy; Stabilization; Treasury Policy, E62 - Fiscal Policy, E31 - Price Level; Inflation; Deflation, and E52 - Monetary Policy
- Creator:
- Schmitz, James Andrew
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 240
- Abstract:
In this paper, I estimate the impact on aggregate labor productivity of having government, rather than private industry, produce investment goods. This policy was pursued to varying degrees by Egypt, India, Turkey, among others. The policy has a large impact because there is both a direct effect (on the production function in the investment sector) and a secondary effect (on the economywide capital stock per worker). I estimate that this policy alone accounted for about one-third of Egypt's aggregate labor productivity gap with the United States during the 1960s.
- Keyword:
- Aggregate productivity, Government production, and Public enterprises
- Subject (JEL):
- O11 - Macroeconomic Analyses of Economic Development, O40 - Economic Growth and Aggregate Productivity: General, L32 - Public Enterprises; Public-Private Enterprises, and E60 - Macroeconomic Policy, Macroeconomic Aspects of Public Finance, and General Outlook: General
- Creator:
- Atkeson, Andrew; Hellwig, Christian; and Ordonez, Guillermo
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 464
- Abstract:
In all markets, firms go through a process of creative destruction: entry, random growth and exit. In many of these markets there are also regulations that restrict entry, possibly distorting this process. We study the public interest rationale for entry taxes in a general equilibrium model with free entry and exit of firms in which firm dynamics are driven by reputation concerns. In our model firms can produce high-quality output by making a costly but efficient initial unobservable investment. If buyers never learn about this investment, an extreme “lemons problem” develops, no firm invests, and the market shuts down. Learning introduces reputation incentives such that a fraction of entrants do invest. We show that, if the market operates with spot prices, entry taxes always enhance the role of reputation to induce investment, improving welfare despite the impact of these taxes on equilibrium prices and total production.
- Keyword:
- Reputation, General equilibrium, Firm dynamics, Entry and exit, Regulation, and Creative destruction
- Subject (JEL):
- D21 - Firm Behavior: Theory, L15 - Information and Product Quality; Standardization and Compatibility, L51 - Economics of Regulation, and D82 - Asymmetric and Private Information; Mechanism Design
- Creator:
- Dallman, Scott; Nath, Anusha; and Premik, Filip
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 623
- Abstract:
Education services in the United States are determined predominantly by non-market institutions, the rules of which are defined by state constitutions. This paper empirically examines the effect of changes in constitutional provisions on education outcomes in the United States. To show causal effects, we exploit discontinuities in the procedure for adopting constitutional amendments to compare outcomes when an amendment passed with those when an amendment failed. Our results show that adoption of an amendment results in higher per-pupil expenditure, higher teacher salaries, smaller class size, and improvements in reading and math test scores. We examine the underlying mechanism driving these results by studying the actions of the legislature and the courts after an amendment is passed. We find that, on average, the legislature responds with a one-year lag in enacting education policies satisfying the minimum standards imposed by the amendment, and there is no increase in the number of education cases reaching appellate courts. Using school finance reforms, we also show that in situations where the legislature fails to enact education policies, courts intervene to enforce constitutional standards to improve outcomes. This enforcement mechanism is more impactful in states that have higher constitutional minimum standards. Taken together, the causal effects on education outcomes and the patterns in legislative bill enactments and court cases provide a novel test of the hypothesis that a strong constitutional provision improves the bargaining position of citizens vis-à-vis that of elected leaders. If citizens do not receive education services as mandated in the constitution, they can seek remedy in court.
- Keyword:
- Education, Legislative bills, Educational outcomes, Amendments, Litigation, and Effects of constitutions
- Subject (JEL):
- H75 - State and Local Government: Health; Education; Welfare; Public Pensions, D02 - Institutions: Design, Formation, Operations, and Impact, I24 - Education and Inequality, and P48 - Other Economic Systems: Political Economy; Legal Institutions; Property Rights; Natural Resources; Energy; Environment; Regional Studies
- Creator:
- Supel, Thomas M.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 032
- Abstract:
No abstract available.
- Creator:
- Bryant, John B.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 057
- Abstract:
Iterated contraction by dominance produces a generalized equilibrium. This solution to game theory is motivated, generated, analyzed, and compared to Nash equilibrium. One implication drawn is that a realized event in a social situation need not be uniquely determined by simple individual choices, even though the preference orderings implying those choices are the appropriate primitive.
- Creator:
- Holmes, Thomas J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 219
- Abstract:
The Economics of QWERTY suggests that historical accidents can trap economies in inefficient equilibria. This paper suggests that such accidents do not have the force that proponents claim. The paper presents a mechanism that may unravel a locational advantage caused by an historical accident. In the model, there are agglomeration benefits from concentrating industry in a particular location because it enables a large variety of local suppliers to emerge. Firms differ by the extent to which they purchase from local suppliers. Low-tier firms purchase little; high-tier firms purchase more. When the industry migrates, the lowest-tier products move first.