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- Creator:
- Geweke, John; Keane, Michael P.; and Runkle, David Edward
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 170
- Abstract:
This research compares several approaches to inference in the multinomial probit model, based on Monte-Carlo results for a seven choice model. The experiment compares the simulated maximum likelihood estimator using the GHK recursive probability simulator, the method of simulated moments estimator using the GHK recursive simulator and kernel-smoothed frequency simulators, and posterior means using a Gibbs sampling-data augmentation algorithm. Each estimator is applied in nine different models, which have from 1 to 40 free parameters. The performance of all estimators is found to be satisfactory. However, the results indicate that the method of simulated moments estimator with the kernel-smoothed frequency simulator does not perform quite as well as the other three methods. Among those three, the Gibbs sampling-data augmentation algorithm appears to have a slight overall edge, with the relative performance of MSM and SML based on the GHK simulator difficult to determine.
932. If Exchange Rates Are Random Walks, Then Almost Everything We Say about Monetary Policy is Wrong
- Creator:
- Alvarez, Fernando, 1964-; Atkeson, Andrew; and Kehoe, Patrick J.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 388
- Abstract:
The key question asked by standard monetary models used for policy analysis, How do changes in short-term interest rates affect the economy? All of the standard models imply that such changes in interest rates affect the economy by altering the conditional means of the macroeconomic aggregates and have no effect on the conditional variances of these aggregates. We argue that the data on exchange rates imply nearly the opposite: the observation that exchange rates are approximately random walks implies that fluctuations in interest rates are associated with nearly one-for-one changes in conditional variances and nearly no changes in conditional means. In this sense standard monetary models capture essentially none of what is going on in the data. We thus argue that almost everything we say about monetary policy using these models is wrong.
- Creator:
- McGrattan, Ellen R. and Prescott, Edward C.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 407
- Abstract:
Appendix A provides firm-level and industry-level evidence that is consistent with several key features of our model, including the predictions that rates of return increase with a firm’s intangible investments and foreign affiliate rates of return increase with age and with their parents’ R&D intensity. Appendix B provides details for the computation of our model’s equilibrium paths, the construction of model national and international accounts, and the sensitivity of our main findings to alternative parameterizations of the model. We demonstrate that the main finding of our paper—namely, that the mismeasurement of capital accounts for roughly 60 percent of the gap in FDI returns—is robust to alternative choices of income shares, depreciation rates, and tax rates, assuming the same procedure is followed in setting exogenous parameters governing the model’s current account. Appendix C demonstrates that adding technology capital and locations to an otherwise standard two-country general equilibrium model has a large impact on the predicted behavior of labor productivity and net exports.
- Subject (JEL):
- F32 - Current Account Adjustment; Short-term Capital Movements and F23 - Multinational Firms; International Business
- Creator:
- Perri, Fabrizio and Quadrini, Vincenzo
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 463
- Abstract:
The 2007–2009 crisis was characterized by an unprecedented degree of international synchronization as all major industrialized countries experienced large macroeconomic contractions around the date of Lehman bankruptcy. At the same time countries also experienced large and synchronized tightening of credit conditions. We present a two-country model with financial market frictions where a credit tightening can emerge as a self-fulfilling equilibrium caused by pessimistic but fully rational expectations. As a result of the credit tightening, countries experience large and endogenously synchronized declines in asset prices and economic activity (international recessions). The model suggests that these recessions are more severe if they happen after a prolonged period of credit expansion.
- Keyword:
- International co-movement, Credit shocks, and Global liquidity
- Subject (JEL):
- G01 - Financial Crises, F44 - International Business Cycles, and F41 - Open Economy Macroeconomics
- Creator:
- Cole, Harold Linh, 1957- and Kehoe, Timothy Jerome, 1953-
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 211
- Abstract:
We characterize the values of government debt and the debt’s maturity structure under which financial crises brought on by a loss of confidence in the government can arise within a dynamic, stochastic general equilibrium model. We also characterize the optimal policy response of the government to the threat of such a crisis. We show that when the country’s fundamentals place it inside the crisis zone, the government is motivated to reduce its debt and exit the crisis zone because this leads to an economic boom and a reduction in the interest rate on the government’s debt. We show that this reduction may be quite gradual if debt is high or the probability of a crisis is low. We also show that, while lengthening the maturity of the debt can shrink the crisis zone, credibility-inducing policies can have perverse effects.
- Subject (JEL):
- H63 - National Debt; Debt Management; Sovereign Debt
- Creator:
- Atkeson, Andrew; Eisfeldt, Andrea L.; and Weill, Pierre-Olivier
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 484
- Abstract:
Building on the Merton (1974) and Leland (1994) structural models of credit risk, we develop a simple, transparent, and robust method for measuring the financial soundness of individual firms using data on their equity volatility. We use this method to retrace quantitatively the history of firms’ financial soundness during U.S. business cycles over most of the last century. We highlight three main findings. First, the three worst recessions between 1926 and 2012 coincided with insolvency crises, but other recessions did not. Second, fluctuations in asset volatility appear to drive variation in firms’ financial soundness. Finally, the financial soundness of financial firms largely resembles that of nonfinancial firms.
- Keyword:
- Volatility, Financial Frictions and Business Cycles, Credit Risk Modeling, and Distance to Default
- Subject (JEL):
- E32 - Business Fluctuations; Cycles, G32 - Financing Policy; Financial Risk and Risk Management; Capital and Ownership Structure; Value of Firms; Goodwill, G01 - Financial Crises, and E44 - Financial Markets and the Macroeconomy
- Creator:
- Wallace, Neil
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 022
- Abstract:
This paper argues that versions of Samuelson/Cass-Yaari overlapping-generations consumption-loans models ought to be taken seriously as models of fiat money. The case is made by summarizing and interpreting what these models have to say about fiat money and by arguing that these properties are robust in the sense that they can be expected to hold in any model of fiat money.
Two of the properties establish the connection between, on the one hand, the existence of equilibria of which value is attached to a fixed stock of fiat money and, on the other hand, the optimality of such equilibria and the nonoptimality of nonfiat-money equilibria. Other properties describe aspects of the tenuousness of monetary equilibria in such models: The nonuniqueness of such equilibria in the sense that there always exists a nonfiat-money equilibrium and the dependence of the existence of the monetary equilibrium on the physical characteristics of other potential assets and on other institutional features like the tax-transfer scheme in effect. Rather than being defects of these models, it is argued that this tenuousness is helpful in interpreting various monetary systems and, in any case, is unavoidable; it will turn up in any good model of fiat money. Still other properties summarize what these models imply about the connection—or, better, lack of such—between fiat money and private borrowing and lending (financial intermediation) and what they imply about country-specific monies.
- Creator:
- Hansen, Lars Peter and Jagannathan, Ravi
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 167
- Abstract:
In this paper we develop alternative ways to compare asset pricing models when it is understood that their implied stochastic discount factors do not price all portfolios correctly. Unlike comparisons based on chi-squared statistics associated with null hypotheses that models are correct, our measures of model performance do not reward variability of discount factor proxies. One of our measures is designed to exploit fully the implications of arbitrage-free pricing of derivative claims. We demonstrate empirically the usefulness of methods in assessing some alternative stochastic factor models that have been proposed in asset pricing literature.
- Subject (JEL):
- C12 - Hypothesis Testing: General, G10 - General Financial Markets: General (includes Measurement and Data), C10 - Econometric and Statistical Methods and Methodology: General, G12 - Asset Pricing; Trading Volume; Bond Interest Rates, C13 - Estimation: General, and E30 - Prices, Business Fluctuations, and Cycles: General (includes Measurement and Data)
- Creator:
- Chari, V. V.; Kehoe, Patrick J.; and McGrattan, Ellen R.
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 217
- Abstract:
We construct a quantitative equilibrium model with price setting and use it to ask whether with staggered price setting monetary shocks can generate business cycle fluctuations. These fluctuations include persistent output fluctuations along with the other defining features of business cycles, like volatile investment and smooth consumption. We assume that prices are exogenously sticky for a short period of time. Persistent output fluctuations require endogenous price stickiness in the sense that firms choose not to change prices very much when they can do so. We find that for a wide range of parameter values the amount of endogenous stickiness is small. As a result, we find that in a standard quantitative business cycle model staggered price setting, by itself, does not generate business cycle fluctuations.
- Keyword:
- Endogenous price stickiness, Staggered price-setting, and Monetary business cycles
- Creator:
- Gittleman, Maury B.; Klee, Mark A.; and Kleiner, Morris
- Series:
- Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department)
- Number:
- 504
- Abstract:
Recent assessments of occupational licensing have shown varying effects of the institution on labor market outcomes. This study revisits the relationship between occupational licensing and labor market outcomes by analyzing a new topical module to the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP). Relative to previously available data, the topical module offers more detailed information on occupational licensing from government, with a larger sample size and access to a richer set of person-level characteristics. We exploit this larger and more detailed data set to examine the labor market outcomes of occupational licensing and how workers obtain these licenses from government. More specifically, we analyze whether there is evidence of a licensing wage premium, and how this premium varies with aspects of the regulatory regime such as the requirements to obtain a license or certification and the level of government oversight. After controlling for observable heterogeneity, including occupational status, we find that those with a license earn higher pay, are more likely to be employed, and have a higher probability of retirement and pension plan offers.
- Keyword:
- Wages, Non-wage benefits , and Occupational licensing
- Subject (JEL):
- J44 - Professional Labor Markets; Occupational Licensing, L50 - Regulation and Industrial Policy: General, and J30 - Wages, Compensation, and Labor Costs: General