6533b7ddfe1ef96bd1273cbe

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Intertemporal substitution and the liquidity effect in a sticky price model

Javier VallésJ. David López-salidoJavier AndrésJavier Andrés

subject

Nominal interest rateEconomics and EconometricsStylized factCapital accumulationCapital (economics)EconomicsLiquidity crisisMonetary economicsElasticity of intertemporal substitutionRobustness (economics)FinanceMarket liquidity

description

Abstract The liquidity effect, defined as a decrease in nominal interest rates in response to a monetary expansion, is a major stylized fact of the business cycle. This paper first confirms that, with separable preferences, a low degree of intertemporal substitution in consumption is a necessary condition for the existence of the liquidity effect. In contrast to this result, in a model with non-separable preferences and capital accumulation it takes an implausibly high elasticity of intertemporal substitution to produce a liquidity effect. The robustness of these results to alternative degrees of nominal rigidities, capital adjustment costs and stochastic monetary processes is also analysed. We conclude that price stickiness, by itself, does not guarantee the existence of a liquidity effect.

https://doi.org/10.1016/s0014-2921(01)00190-8