4 research outputs found

    Technological Revolutions and Debt Hangovers: Is There a Link?

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    Abstract The Great Recession, the Great Depression, and the Japanese slump of the 1990s were all preceded by periods of major technological innovation. In an attempt to understand these facts, we estimate a model with noisy news about the future. We find that beliefs about long run income adjust with an important delay to shifts in trend productivity. This delay, together with estimated shifts in the trend of productivity in the three cases, are able to tell a common and simple story for the observed dynamics of productivity and consumption on a 20 to 25 year window. Our analysis highlights the advantages of a look at this data from the point of view of the medium run

    Deflation

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    Deflation can be costly and difficult to anticipate, and concerns of a generalized decline in prices in both industrial and emerging market economies have increased recently. This paper investigates the causes and consequences of deflation, the risk of deflation globally and in individual countries, and policy options. The authors discuss issues related to the measurement, determinants, and costs of deflation and examine previous episodes of deflation. They compute an index of deflation vulnerability, which they apply to the 35 largest industrial and emerging market economies. Finally, the paper offers several policy options for protecting against deflation and for coping with it should it strike.

    Technological Revolutions and Debt Hangovers: Is There a Link?

    No full text
    Abstract The Great Recession, the Great Depression, and the Japanese slump of the 1990s were all preceded by periods of major technological innovation. In an attempt to understand these facts, we estimate a model with noisy news about the future. We find that beliefs about long run income adjust with an important delay to shifts in trend productivity. This delay, together with estimated shifts in the trend of productivity in the three cases, are able to tell a common and simple story for the observed dynamics of productivity and consumption on a 20 to 25 year window. Our analysis highlights the advantages of looking at this data on medium-run basis
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