Search Constraints
Search Results
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Creator: Townsend, Robert M., 1948- Series: Financial history conference Abstract: ln environments with private information and spatial separation, the ability of agents to establish mutually beneficial arrangements can be limited by their ability to communicate contemporary dealings and histories of past dealings. Indeed, with the extension of some recent work in contract theory and mechanism design, this paper argues that location or person-specific assignment systems, portable object record-keeping systems, written message systems, and telecommunication systems can be viewed as communication systems which are successively more complete in this sense. An attempt is made also to match these various communication systems with systems in use in historical primitive, and/or contemporary societies and to interpret these communication systems as financial structures.
Subject (JEL): D23 - Organizational Behavior; Transaction Costs; Property Rights, C44 - Operations Research; Statistical Decision Theory, and D83 - Search; Learning; Information and Knowledge; Communication; Belief; Unawareness -
Creator: Bewley, Truman F. (Truman Fassett), 1941- Series: Models of Monetary Economies Description: Post-conference contribution.
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Creator: Lucas, Jr., Robert E. Series: Models of Monetary Economies Description: Includes discussions by Leonid Hurwicz, Milton Harris, and Frank Hahn.
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Creator: Starr, Ross M. Series: Models of Monetary Economies Description: Post-conference contribution.
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Creator: Cass, David and Shell, Karl Series: Models of Monetary Economies Description: Post-conference contribution.
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Creator: Cass, David Series: Models of Monetary Economies Description: Post-conference contribution.
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Creator: Townsend, Robert M., 1948- Series: Models of Monetary Economies Description: Post-conference contribution.
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Creator: Bryant, John B. Series: Models of Monetary Economies Description: Post-conference contribution.
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Creator: Wallace, Neil Series: Models of Monetary Economies Description: Includes discussions by James Tobin and Jose Alexandre Scheinkman.
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Creator: Kareken, John H. and Wallace, Neil Series: Models of Monetary Economies Description: In December 1978 the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis was host to a conference entitled "Models of Monetary Economies," and this volume contains the papers presented and discussed at that conference. They will be found in part 1, along with the comments of the appointed discussants. The volume also contains several papers that were not presented at the conference. Long before the conference began, and again at its conclusion, conference participants were invited to submit notes or longer papers for inclusion in the conference volume. And, happily, some obliged. Their contributions will be found in part 2.
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Series: Models of Monetary Economies Description: Includes roster of conference participants, December 7-8, 1978.
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Creator: Diba, Behzad and Oh, Seonghwan Series: Business analysis committee meeting Abstract: This paper reports some empirical evidence on the relation between the expected real interest rate and monetary aggregates in postwar U.S. data. We find some evidence against the hypothesis, implied by the Real Business Cycle model of Litterman and Weiss (1985), that the expected real interest rate follows a univariate autoregressive process, not Granger-caused by monetary aggregates. Our findings, however, are consistent with a more general bivariate model--suggested by what Barro (1987, Chapter 5) refers to as "the basic market-clearing model"--in which the real rate depends on its own lagged values and on lagged output. Taking this bivariate model as our null hypothesis, we find no evidence that money-stock changes have a significant liquidity effect on the expected real interest rate.
Subject (JEL): E43 - Interest Rates: Determination, Term Structure, and Effects, E32 - Business Fluctuations; Cycles, and E51 - Money Supply; Credit; Money Multipliers -
Creator: Becketti, Sean Series: Business analysis committee meeting Abstract: The new classical view that macroeconomic fluctuations can be modeled as an equilibrium system perturbed by transitory monetary disturbances has been challenged in recent years by another equilibrium view of fluctuations, the so-called real business cycle theory. In this latter framework, shocks to the production function induce both intertemporal substitution of labor supply and permanent shifts in the stochastic trend of output. Monetary shocks, on the other hand, play only a minor role in this view of the cycle. Much of the empirical support for the real business cycle view of fluctuations is based on a re-examination of traditional methods for detrending economic time series. The issues raised by the real business cycle theorists are not new; indeed, they go back at least to the NBER's first business cycle studies. However, the real business cycle theorists attach a radical economic interpretation to what, on the surface, appears to be a purely technical note on the proper method for detrending economic data. This paper reviews the debate over stochastic trends, discusses the economic implications of the real business cycle interpretation of stochastic trend models, and weighs the time series evidence for some of the stronger claims made by real business cycle theorists. We conclude that, while this literature raises real and useful questions about the interpretation of observed fluctuations, the new classical view of the cycle is not ruled out by the data.
Subject (JEL): E13 - General Aggregative Models: Neoclassical and E32 - Business Fluctuations; Cycles -
Creator: Jovanovic, Boyan, 1951- and Rob, Rafael Series: Models of economic growth and development Abstract: This paper presents a model of growth through technical progress. The nature and scope of what is learned is derived from a set of axioms, and optimal search behavior by agents is then analyzed. Agents can search intensively or extensively. Intensive search explores a technology in greater depth, while extensive search yields new technologies. Agents alternate between these two modes of search. The economy grows forever and the growth rate is bounded away from zero. The growth rate is on average higher during periods of intensive search than during periods of extensive search. Epochs of higher growth are initiated by discoveries that call for further intensive exploration. This mechanism is reminiscent of the process described by Schumpeter as causing long-wave business cycles. Serial correlation properties of output and growth stem from the presence of intensive rather than extensive search. The two key parameters are technological opportunity and the cost of the extensive search.
Subject (JEL): O30 - Innovation; Research and Development; Technological Change; Intellectual Property Rights: General and O47 - Empirical Studies of Economic Growth; Aggregate Productivity; Cross-Country Output Convergence -
Creator: Den Haan, Wouter J., 1962- Series: Nonlinear rational expectations modeling group Abstract: The objective of this paper is to investigate whether, in a Sidrauski type model with uncertainty, welfare maximization calls for following the famous "Chicago Rule". This question will be answered in the affirmative in this paper, i.e. social welfare optimization calls for a zero nominal interest rate on one-period bonds. The zero nominal interest rate, however, does not imply in an uncertain world that there is no systematic difference between the expected rate of deflation and the rate of time preference in an economy without growth. The magnitude of this difference turns out to be small, however. Numerical welfare comparisons are made between the optimal policy and policies in which the growth rate of money is fixed. The optimal policy requires that the monetary authorities react every period to the available information and they choose a growth level of the money stock that will set the interest rate equal to zero. If we compare the time paths of the real variables under the optimal policy with the time paths if the money supply decreases at a rate equal to the rate of time preference, then we see hardly any differences. The price dynamics can be very different, however. The paper also investigates the issue of superneutrality and finds that the quantitative deviations from superneutrality are substantial if a model with a shopping time technology is used. The neo-classical models in this paper are solved numerically using a technique developed in Marcet (1988).
Subject (JEL): E31 - Price Level; Inflation; Deflation and E52 - Monetary Policy -
Creator: Cole, Harold Linh, 1957-; Dow, James, 1961-; and English, William B. (William Berkeley), 1960- Series: International perspectives on debt, growth, and business cycles Abstract: We consider a model of international sovereign debt where repayment is enforced because defaulting nations lose their reputation and consequently, are excluded from international capital markets. Underlying the analysis of reputation is the hypothesis that borrowing countries have different, unobservable, attitudes towards the future. Some regimes are relatively myopic, while others are willing to make sacrifices to preserve their access to debt markets. Nations' preferences, while unobservable, are not fixed but evolve over time according to a Markov process. We make two main points. First we argue that in models of sovereign debt the length of the punishment interval that follows a default should be based on economic factors rather than being chosen arbitrarily. In our model, the length of the most natural punishment interval depends primarily on the preference parameters. Second, we point out that there is a more direct way for governments to regain their reputation. By offering to partially repay loans in default, a government can signal its reliability. This type of signaling can cause punishment interval equilibria to break down. We examine the historical record on lending resumption to argue that in almost all cases, some kind of partial repayment was made.
Subject (JEL): H63 - National Debt; Debt Management; Sovereign Debt and F34 - International Lending and Debt Problems -
Creator: Braun, Steven and Krane, Spencer D. Series: Business analysis committee meeting Keyword: Handout Subject (JEL): M11 - Production Management, D21 - Firm Behavior: Theory, and G31 - Capital Budgeting; Fixed Investment and Inventory Studies; Capacity -
Creator: Grossman, Gene M. and Helpman, Elhanan Series: International perspectives on debt, growth, and business cycles Abstract: We construct a model of the product cycle featuring endogenous innovation and endogenous technology transfer. Competitive entrepreneurs in the North expend resources to bring out new products whenever expected present discounted value of future oligopoly profits exceeds current product development costs. Each Northern oligopolist continuously faces the risk that its product will be copied by a Southern imitator, at which time its profit stream will come to an end. In the South, competitive entrepreneurs may devote resources to learning the production processes that have been developed in the North. There too, costs (of reverse engineering) must be covered by a stream of operating profits. We study the determinants of the long-run rate of growth of the world economy, and the long-run rate of technological diffusion. We also provide an analysis of the effects of exogenous events and of public policy on relative wage rates in the two regions.
Keyword: Innovation, North-South trade, Product cycles, Imitation, Long-run growth, and Technological change Subject (JEL): F11 - Neoclassical Models of Trade, O33 - Technological Change: Choices and Consequences; Diffusion Processes, and F41 - Open Economy Macroeconomics -
Creator: Jorgenson, Dale W. (Dale Weldeau), 1933- Series: Models of economic growth and development Keyword: Handout Subject (JEL): H20 - Taxation, Subsidies, and Revenue: General -
Creator: Uhlig, Harald, 1961- Series: Nonlinear rational expectations modeling group Subject (JEL): C63 - Computational Techniques; Simulation Modeling and C51 - Model Construction and Estimation -
Creator: Taylor, John B. Series: Nonlinear rational expectations modeling group Keyword: Rational expectation models Subject (JEL): C51 - Model Construction and Estimation and C63 - Computational Techniques; Simulation Modeling -
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Creator: Coleman, Wilbur John Series: Nonlinear rational expectations modeling group Abstract: A cash-in-advance constraint on consumption is incorporated into a standard model of consumption and capital accumulation. Monetary policy consists of lump-sum cash transfers. Methods are developed for establishing the existence and uniqueness of an equilibrium and for explicitly constructing this equilibrium. The model economy's dependence on monetary policy is explored.
Description: Also published in the International Finance Discussion Paper series, number 323.
Keyword: Equilibrium, Planned Growth economy, and Monetary Growth economy Subject (JEL): E52 - Monetary Policy, E31 - Price Level; Inflation; Deflation, O42 - Monetary Growth Models, and O41 - One, Two, and Multisector Growth Models -
Creator: Baxter, Marianne, 1956- Series: Nonlinear rational expectations modeling group Abstract: This paper develops a new method for approximating dynamic competitive equilibria in economies in which competitive equilibrium is not necessarily Pareto optimal. The method involves finding approximate equilibrium policy functions by iterating on the stochastic Euler equations which characterize the economy's equilibrium. Two applications are presented: the stochastic growth model of Brock and Mirman (1971) modified to allow distortionary taxation, and a model of inflation and capital accumulation based on Stockman (1981). The computational speed and accuracy of this approach suggests that it may be a feasible method for studying suboptimal economies with large state spaces.
Subject (JEL): C63 - Computational Techniques; Simulation Modeling, E51 - Money Supply; Credit; Money Multipliers, and C61 - Optimization Techniques; Programming Models; Dynamic Analysis -
Creator: Gertler, Mark and Rogoff, Kenneth S. Series: International perspectives on debt, growth, and business cycles Abstract: Across developing countries, capital market inefficiencies tend to decrease and external borrowing tends to sharply increase as national wealth rises. We construct a simple model of intertemporal trade under asymmetric information which provides a coherent explanation of both these phenomenon, without appealing to imperfect capital mobility. The model can be applied to a number of policy issues in LDC lending, including the debt overhang problem, and the impact of government guarantees of private debt to foreign creditors. In the two-country general equilibrium version of the model, an increase in wealth in the rich country can induce a decline in investment in the poor country via a "siphoning effect". Finally, we present some new empirical evidence regarding the link between LDC borrowing and per capita income.
Subject (JEL): F43 - Economic Growth of Open Economies and O11 - Macroeconomic Analyses of Economic Development -
Creator: Chari, V. V. and Hopenhayn, Hugo Andres Series: Models of economic growth and development Abstract: We present a model of vintage human capital. The economy exhibits exogenous deterministic technological change. Technology requires skills that are specific to the vintage. A stationary competitive equilibrium is defined and shown to exist and be unique, as well as Pareto optimal. The stationary equilibrium is characterized by an endogenous distribution of skilled workers across vintages. The distribution is shown to be single peaked, and under general conditions there is a lag between the time when a technology appears and the peak of its usage, what is known as diffusion. An increase in the rate of exogenous technological charge shirts the distribution of human capital to more recent vintages and increases the relative wage of the unskilled workers in each vintage.
Subject (JEL): O41 - One, Two, and Multisector Growth Models, J24 - Human Capital; Skills; Occupational Choice; Labor Productivity, and O31 - Innovation and Invention: Processes and Incentives -
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Creator: Aschauer, David Alan Series: Business analysis committee meeting Abstract: This paper considers the relationship between total private factor productivity and stock and flow government expenditure variables. The empirical results indicate that (i) the nonmilitary public capital stock is dramatically more important in determining productivity than is either the flow of nonmilitary or military spending, (ii) military capital is not productive, and (iii) the public stock of structures--especially a "core" infrastructure of streets, highways, sewers, and water systems--has more explanatory power for productivity than does the stock of equipment. The paper also suggests an important role for the net public capital stock in the "productivity slowdown" of the last fifteen years.
Subject (JEL): D24 - Production; Cost; Capital; Capital, Total Factor, and Multifactor Productivity; Capacity and H54 - National Government Expenditures and Related Policies: Infrastructures; Other Public Investment and Capital Stock -
Creator: Todd, Richard M. Series: Business analysis committee meeting Description: Version without Software Appendix appears on the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Web site at http://www.minneapolisfed.org/publications_papers/pub_display.cfm?id=571
Keyword: BVAR, Vector autoregression, and Bayesian analysis Subject (JEL): C53 - Forecasting Models; Simulation Methods -
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Creator: Ray, Debraj and Streufert, Peter A. Series: Models of economic growth and development Abstract: We incorporate the consumption-ability relationship of static "efficiency wage" models into a dynamic general equilibrium model. We show that for many aggregate land stocks, there is a continuum of unemployment rates which could persist indefinitely as part of a stationary equilibrium. For many of these aggregate land stocks, both unemployment and full employment are distrinct possibilities. Broadly speaking, more unemployment corresponds to more undernourishment and more inequality in land distribution. Thus our results suggest that the market mechanism is less efficacious than land reform in reducing unemployment and undernourishment.
Subject (JEL): F41 - Open Economy Macroeconomics, O42 - Monetary Growth Models, and J41 - Labor Contracts -
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Creator: Roberds, William Series: Business analysis committee meeting Abstract: One of the more significant developments in econometric modeling over the past decade has been the invention of the forecasting technique known as Bayesian vector autoregression (BVAR). This paper provides a detailed description of the process of specifying a BVAR model of quarterly time series on the U.S. macroeconomy. The postsample forecasting performance of the model is evaluated at an informal level by comparing the model's performance to certain naive forecasting methods, and is evaluated at a formal level by means of efficiency tests. Although the null hypothesis of efficiency is rejected for the model's forecasts, the accuracy of the model exceeds that of naive forecasting methods, and seems comparable to that of commercial forecasting firms for early quarter forecasts.
Keyword: Vector autoregression, BVAR, and Bayesian analysis Subject (JEL): C11 - Bayesian Analysis: General and C53 - Forecasting Models; Simulation Methods -
Creator: Prescott, Edward C. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 102 Abstract: Recent developments in business cycle theory are reviewed. The principal finding is that the growth model, which was developed to account for the secular patterns in important economic aggregates, displays the business cycle phenomena once it incorporates the observed randomness in the rate of technological advance. The amplitudes and serial correlation properties of fluctuations in output and employment that the growth model predicts match those historically experienced in the United States. Further, the model continues to display the growth facts it was developed to explain.
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Creator: Rolnick, Arthur J., 1944- and Weber, Warren E. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 088 Abstract: The claim that bad money drives out good is one of the oldest and most cited in economics. Economists refer to this claim as Gresham’s law. Yet despite its seemingly universal acceptance, this claim does not warrant its status as a law. We find it has no convincing explanations and many overlooked exceptions. We propose an alternative hypothesis based on the costs of using a medium of exchange at a nonpar price: small-denomination currency undervalued at the mint tends to disappear from circulation while large-denomination currency usually circulates at premium. Examining a variety of historical episodes when market and legal prices were different, we find our “law” can explain history much better than Gresham’s.
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Creator: Bryant, John B. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 053 Abstract: In a simple, coherent, general equilibrium model it is demonstrated why stock market prices do not reflect costly but socially useless information.
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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.
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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: 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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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Creator: Kiyotaki, Nobuhiro and Wright, Randall, 1956- Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 123 Abstract: We analyze a general equilibrium model with search frictions and differentiated commodities. Because of the many differentiated commodities, barter is difficult because it requires a double coincidence of wants, and this provides a medium of exchange role for fiat money. We prove the existence of equilibrium with valued fiat money and show it is robust to certain changes in the environment, including imposing transactions costs, storage costs, and taxes on the use of money. Rate of return dominance, liquidity, and the potential welfare improving role of fiat money are discussed.
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Creator: Williamson, Stephen D. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 119 Abstract: During the period 1870–1913, Canada had a well-diversified branch banking system while banks in the U.S. unit banking system were less diversified. Canadian banks could issue large-denomination notes with no restrictions on their backing, while all U.S. currency was essentially an obligation of the U.S. government. Also, experience in the two countries with regard to bank failures and banking panics was quite different. A general equilibrium business cycle model with endogenous financial intermediation is constructed that captures these historical Canadian and American monetary and banking arrangements as special cases. The predictions of the model contradict conventional wisdom with regard to the cyclical effects of banking panics. Support for these predictions is found in aggregate annual time series data for Canada and the United States.
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Creator: Stutzer, Michael J. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 066 Abstract: Some Revenue Sharing programs, including the Federal government’s General Revenue Sharing program, reward higher tax effort with larger aid payments. A natural, game-theoretic generalization of the standard consumer demand based theory of grants-in-aid is used to examine the impacts such tax effort provisions have on the recipient government’s tax effort, spending levels, and welfare. Nonlinear simulation is used to provide rough quantitative estimates of the impacts General Revenue Sharing had in 1972.
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Creator: Mehra, Rajnish and Prescott, Edward C. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 081 Abstract: Restrictions that general equilibrium theory place upon average returns are found to be strongly violated by the U.S. data in the 1889–1978 period. This result is robust to model specification and measurement problems. We conclude that equilibrium models which are not Arrow-Debreu economies are needed to rationalize the large average equity premium that prevailed during the last 90 years.
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Creator: Stutzer, Michael J. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 055 Abstract: The qualitative dynamics of a discrete time version of a deterministic, continuous time, nonlinear macro model formulated by Haavelmo are fully characterized. Recently developed methods of symbolic dynamics and ergodic theory are shown to provide a simple, effective means of analyzing the behavior of the resulting one-parameter family of first-order, deterministic, nonlinear difference equations. A complex periodic and random "aperiodic" orbit structure dependent on a key structural parameter is present, which contrasts with the total absence of such complexity in Haavelmo's continuous time version. Several implications for dynamic economic modelling are discussed.
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Creator: Litterman, Robert B. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 092 Abstract: This paper describes a Bayesian specification procedure used to generate a vector autoregressive model for forecasting macroeconomic variables. The specification search is over parameters of a prior. This quasi-Bayesian approach is viewed as a flexible tool for constructing a filter which optimally extracts information about the future from a set of macroeconomic data. The procedure is applied to a set of data and a consistent improvement in forecasting performance is documented.
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Creator: Runkle, David Edward Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 107 Abstract: The statistical significance of variance decompositions and impulse response functions for unrestricted vector autoregressions is questionable. Most previous studies are suspect because they have not provided confidence intervals for variance decompositions and impulse response functions. Here two methods of computing such intervals are developed, one using a normal approximation, the other using bootstrapped resampling. An example from Sims’ work illustrates the importance of computing these confidence intervals. In the example, the 95 percent confidence intervals for variance decompositions span up to 66 percentage points at that usual forecasting horizon.
Keyword: Macroeconomics, Bootstrapping, and Time series -
Creator: Sargent, Thomas J. and Wallace, Neil Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 064 Abstract: On our interpretation, real bills advocates favor unfettered intermediation, while their critics, who we call quantity theorists, favor legal restrictions on intermediation geared to separate “money” from “credit.” We display examples of economies in which quantity-theory assertions about “money-supply” and price-level behavior under the real bills regime are valid. In particular, both the price level and an asset total that quantity theorists would identify as money fluctuate more under a real bills regime than under a regime with restrictions like those favored by quantity theorists. Despite this, the Pareto criterion does not support the quantity-theory position.
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Creator: Stutzer, Michael J. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 090 Abstract: Silberberg [6] and Pauwels [2] have produced and clarified seminal results in the comparative statics of single-agent classical optimization problems. This paper extends Pauwels’ method to derive analogous results for stable Nath equilibria in a subclass of the widely used class of concave orthogonal games defined by Rosen [3]. Application of these results to cost curve shifts in the asymmetric Cournot oligopoly immediately uncovers apparently new comparative statics results.
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Creator: Kollintzas, Tryphon, 1953- Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 113 Abstract: This paper derives a variance bounds test for a broad class of linear rational expectations models. According to this test, if observed data accord with the model, then a weighted sum of auto-covariances of the covariance-stationary components of the endogenous state variables should be nonnegative. The new test reinterprets West’s (1986) variance bounds test and extends its applicability by not requiring observable exogenous state variables, covariance-stationary exogenous or endogenous state variables, or a zero initial value for the endogenous state variable. The paper also discusses the possibility of the new test’s application to nonlinear models.
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Creator: Hansen, Lars Peter and Sargent, Thomas J. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 075 Abstract: This paper proposes a method for estimating the parameters of continuous time, stochastic rational expectations models from discrete time observations. The method is important since various heuristic procedures for deducing the implications for discrete time data of continuous time models, such as replacing derivatives with first differences, can sometimes give rise to very misleading conclusions about parameters. Our proposal is to express the restrictions imposed by the rational expectations model on the continuous time process generating the observable variables. Then the likelihood function of a discrete time sample of observations from this process is obtained. Parameter estimates are computed by maximizing the likelihood function with respect to the free parameters of the continuous time model.
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Creator: Chari, V. V. and Kehoe, Patrick J. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 121 Abstract: We examine the limiting behavior of cooperative and noncooperative fiscal policies as countries’ market power goes to zero. We show that these policies converge if countries raise revenues through lump-sum taxation. However, if there are unremovable domestic distortions, such as distorting taxes, there can be gains to coordination even when a single country’s policy cannot affect world prices. These results differ from the received wisdom in the optimal tariff literature. The key distinction is that, unlike in the tariff literature, the spending decisions of governments are explicitly modeled.
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Creator: Sargent, Thomas J. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 058 Abstract: This paper explores some of the implications for econometric practice of the principle that people’s observed behavior will change when their constraints change. In dynamic contexts, a proper definition of people’s constraints includes among them laws of motion that describe the evolution of the taxes they must pay and the prices of the goods that they buy and sell. Changes in agents’ perceptions of these laws of motion (or constraints) will in general produce changes in the schedules that describe the choices they make as a function of the information that they possess. Until very recently, received dynamic econometric practice ignored this principle. The practice of dynamic econometrics should be changed so that it is consistent with the principle that people’s rules of choice are influenced by their constraints. This is a substantial undertaking, and involves major adjustments in the ways that we formulate, estimate, and simulate econometric models.
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Creator: Roberds, William Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 105 Abstract: Methods are presented for solving a certain class of rational expectations models, principally those that arise from dynamic games. The methods allow for numerical solution using spectral factorization algorithms and for estimation of these models using maximum likelihood techniques.
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Creator: Miller, Preston J. and Roberds, William Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 120 Abstract: Using a simple model, we show why previous empirical studies of budget policy effects are flawed. Due to an identification problem, those studies’ findings can be shown to be consistent with either policies mattering or not.
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Creator: Hansen, Lars Peter and Sargent, Thomas J. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 059 Abstract: This paper describes methods for estimating the parameters of continuous time linear stochastic rational expectations models from discrete time observations. The economic models that we study are continuous time, multiple variable, stochastic, linear-quadratic rational expectations models. The paper shows how such continuous time models can properly be used to place restrictions on discrete time data. Various heuristic procedures for deducing the implications for discrete time data of these models, such as replacing derivatives with first differences, can sometimes give rise to very misleading conclusions about parameters. The idea is to express the restrictions imposed by the rational expectations model on the continuous time process of the observable variables. Then the likelihood function of a discrete-time sample of observations from this process is obtained. Estimators are obtained by maximizing the likelihood function with respect to the free parameters of the continuous time model.