29,218 research outputs found

    Granger causality and equilibrium business cycle theory

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    Post-war US data show that consumption growth "Granger causes" output and investment growth. This is puzzling if technology is the driving force of the business cycle. I ask whether general equilibrium models with information frictions and non-technology shocks can rationalize the observed causal relations. My conclusion is they cannot.Business cycles

    Durable good inventories and the volatility of production: explaining the less volatile U.S. economy

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    This paper provides a simple dynamic optimization model of durable goods inventories. Closed-form solutions are derived in a general equilibrium environment with imperfect information and serially correlated shocks. The model is then applied to scrutinize some popular conjectures regarding the causes of the volatility reduction of GDP since 1984.Investments ; Production (Economic theory)

    Money supply, credit expansion, and housing price inflation

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    Credit and M2 may be driven simultaneously as part of a broader financial intermediation process; a common underlying factor may be the interest rateMoney supply ; Credit ; Housing - Prices

    Liquidity demand and welfare in a heterogeneous-agent economy

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    This paper provides an analytically tractable general-equilibrium model of money demand with micro-foundations. The model is based on the incomplete-market model of Bewley (1980) where money serves as a store of value and provides liquidity to smooth consumption. The model is applied to study the effects of monetary policies. It is shown that heterogeneous liquidity demand can lead to sluggish movements in aggregate prices and positive responses from aggregate output to transitory money injections. However, permanent money growth can be extremely costly: With log utility function and an endogenously determined distribution of money balances that matches the household data, agents are willing to reduce consumption by 8% (or more) to avoid 10% annual inflation. The large welfare cost of inflation arises because inflation destroys the liquidity value and the buffer-stock function of money, thus raising the volatility of consumption for low-income households. The astonishingly large welfare cost of moderate inflation provides a justification for adopting a low inflation target by central banks and offers an explanation for the empirical relationship between inflation and social unrest in developing countries.Liquidity (Economics)

    Input and output inventory dynamics

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    This paper develops an analytically-tractable general-equilibrium model of inventory dynamics based on a precautionary stockout-avoidance motive. The model’s predictions are broadly consistent with the U.S. business cycle and key features of inventory behavior, including (i) a large inventory stock-to-sales ratio and a small inventory investment-to-sales ratio in the long run, (ii) excess volatility of production relative to sales, (iii) procyclical inventory investment but countercyclical stock-to-sales ratio over the business cycle, and (iv) more volatile input inventories than output inventories. It is also shown that technological improvement of inventory management (that eliminates production/ordering lags) can increase, rather than decrease, the volatility of aggregate output. Key to this seemingly counter-intuitive result is that a stockout- avoidance motive leads to procyclical liquidity-value of inventories (hence, procyclical relative prices of output), which acts as an automatic stabilizer that discourages final sales in a boom and encourages final sales during a recession, thereby reducing the variability of GDP.Inventories ; Business cycles

    The Power of Demand: A General Equilibrium Analysis of Multi-Stage-Fabrication Economy with Inventories

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    Due to lack of models that can feature both output- and input-inventories simultaneously, several well known puzzles pertaining to inventory fluctuations and the business cycle have not been well explained by dynamic optimization theory. By presenting a general equilibrium, multi-stage production model of inventories with separate decisions to order, use, and stock input materials and to produce, sell, and store finished output, this paper offers not only a model of input-output inventories but also a neoclassical perspective on the theory of aggregate demand. It shows that due to production/ delivery lags, firms opt to hold both output- and input-inventories so as to guard against demand uncertainty at all stages of production. As a result, not only is production more volatile than sales but also is inputordering more volatile than input-usages, giving rise to a chain-multiplier mechanism that propagates and amplifies demand shocks at downstream towards upstream via input-output linkages. This multiplier effect induced by precautionary inventory investment at each production stage can explain several long-standing puzzles of the business cycle documented in the inventory literature.

    Why do people dislike inflation?

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    Inflation is seldom caused by lump-sum transfers but is often caused by higher government spending programs.Inflation (Finance)

    Economic growth and the global savings glut

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    Economic theory predicts that fast growth can lead to high saving rates if people lack financial institutions that allow them to borrow.Economic development ; International finance

    Production and inventory behavior of capital

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    This paper provides a dynamic optimization model of durable good inventories to study the interactions between investment demand and production of capital goods. There are three major findings: First, capital suppliers' inventory behavior makes investment demand more volatile in equilibrium; Second, equilibrium price of capital is characterized by downward stickiness; Third, the responses of the capital market to interest rate and other environmental changes are asymmetric. All are the results of equilibrium interactions between demand and supply.Production (Economic theory) ; Business cycles ; Investments

    An analytical approach to buffer-stock saving

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    The profession has been longing for closed-form solutions to consumption functions under uncertainty and borrowing constraints. This paper proposes an analytical approach to solving buffer-stock saving models with both idiosyncratic and aggregate uncertainties. It is shown analytically that an individual’s optimal consumption plan under uncertainty follows the rule of thumb: Consumption is proportional to a target wealth with the marginal propensity to consume depending on the state of the macroeconomy. The method is applied to addressing two long- standing puzzles: the "excess smoothness" and "excess sensitivity" of consumption with respect to income changes. Some of my findings sharply contradict the conventional wisdom.Saving and investment ; Income
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