Search results for "jel:E32"

showing 10 items of 31 documents

The Stabilizing Role of Government Size

2007

This paper presents an analysis of how alternative models of the business cycle can replicate the stylized fact that large governments are associated with less volatile economies. Our analysis shows that adding nominal rigidities and costs of capital adjustment to an otherwise standard RBC model can generate a negative correlation between government size and the volatility of output. However, in the model, we find that the stabilizing effect is only due to a composition effect and it is not present when we look at the volatility of private output. Given that empirically we also observe a negative correlation between government size and the volatility of consumption, we modify the model by i…

Consumption (economics)automatic stabilizers; government size; output volatilityEconomics and EconometricsStylized factControl and OptimizationApplied Mathematicsjel:E32Government size output volatility automatic stabilizers.Replicatejel:E52jel:E63Government (linguistics)Capital (economics)Business cycleEconometricsEconomicsVolatility (finance)Negative correlationgovernment size output volatility automatic stabilizers
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A rational expectations model for simulation and policy evaluation of the Spanish economy

2010

This paper presents the model used for simulation purposes within the Spanish Ministry of Economic Affairs and Finance. REMS (a Rational Expectations Model for the Spanish economy) is a small open economy dynamic general equilibrium model in the vein of the New-Neoclassical-Keynesian synthesis models, with a strongly micro-founded system of equations. In the long run REMS behaves in accordance with the neoclassical growth model. In the short run, it incorporates nominal, real and financial frictions. Real frictions include adjustment costs in consumption (via habits in consumption and rule-of-thumb households) and investment into physical capital. Due to financial frictions, there is no per…

Dynamisches GleichgewichtMacroeconomicsKleine offene VolkswirtschaftGeneral equilibrium theoryjel:E62Small open economyWirkungsanalysegeneral equilibrium rigidities policy simulationsjel:E24MicroeconomicsPhysical capitalddc:330EconomicsAsset (economics)general equilibriumPhillips curveE32VolkswirtschaftSpanienrigiditiesRational expectationsShort runjel:E32policy simulationsEconomyE24ArbitrageE62General Economics Econometrics and FinanceSimulationNeue Neoklassische SyntheseSERIEs
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Are business cycles asymmetric? Some European evidence

1997

Economic thought has ofien regal'ded business cycles as asymmetric. This papel' examines the existence of asymmetries over the business cycle in three European countries: France, Germany and the United Kingdom. To analyze this issue, industrial production in these countries from 1957 to 1994 is examined, and quarterly contractions and expansions in this variable are compared. The results obtained with both parametric and nonparametric methods allow the existence of asymmetries in these countries to be questioned. El pensamiento económico ha considerado frecuentemente que los ciclos económicos son de naturaleza asimétrica. Este trabajo examina la existencia de asimetrías en los ciclos económ…

Economic ThoughtMacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsVariable (computer science)Market economyIndustrial productionBusiness cycleEconomicsjel:E32Ciclos económicos simetría Business cycle symmetry
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ECONOMIC COMOVEMENTS IN EUROPEAN COUNTRIES

2005

This paper examines the existence of common movements in production, prices and interest rates in three countries: France, Germany and the United Kingdom. To analyse this issue, the usual approach of studying cross-correlations is extended. Though these European countries are closely linked to each other, the results obtained vary substantially over time, with the economic variables and in the countries under consideration. Este trabajo examina la existencia de movimientos comunes en la producción, en los precios y en los tipos de interés en tres países: Francia, Alemania y el Reino Unido. Para analizar este tema, se extiende el enfoque habitual del estudio de las correlaciones cruzadas. A …

Economics and EconometricsCiclo económico; comovimientos. Business cycle; comovementsmedia_common.quotation_subjectEconomicsProduction (economics)jel:E32International economicsInterest ratemedia_common
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Leading indicator properties of US high-yield credit spreads.

2010

Abstract In this paper we examine the out-of-sample forecast performance of high-yield credit spreads for real-time and revised data regarding employment and industrial production in the US. We evaluate models using both a point forecast and a probability forecast exercise. Our main findings suggest that the best results come from using only a few factors obtained by pooling information from a number of sector-specific high-yield credit spreads. In particular, for employment and at short-run horizons, there is a gain from using a principal components model fitted to high-yield credit spreads compared to the prediction produced by benchmarks. Moreover, forecast results based on revised data …

Economics and EconometricsFinancial economicsjel:C53Industrial productionYield (finance)Real-time dataCredit spreads principal components forecastingPoolingjel:E32jel:C22Economic indicatorPrincipal component analysisEconomicsPrincipal componentReal-time dataPoint forecastCredit spreadCredit spreads Principal components Forecasting Real-time dataForecasting
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Bubbles and Crowding-in of Capital via a Savings Glut

2017

This paper uncovers a mechanism by which bubbles crowd in capital investment. If capital formation is initially depressed by a binding credit constraint, a bubble triggers a savings glut. Higher returns in a new bubbly equilibrium attract additional savings, which are channeled to expand investment at the extensive margin, leading to permanently higher capital, output, and wages. We demonstrate that crowding-in through this channel is a robust phenomenon that occurs along the entire time path.

Economics and EconometricsLabour economicsCapital investmentEconomicsjel:E21jel:E44Monetary economicsE21 [JEL Classifications]Margin (finance)savings glutrational bubbles0502 economics and businessEconomicsddc:330050207 economicsConstraint (mathematics)050205 econometrics E32Crowding inTime pathfinancial frictions05 social sciencesjel:E32Investment (macroeconomics)Capital (economics)E44crowding-inrational bubblessavings glutcrowding-infinancial frictionsE21
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Household debt and labor market fluctuations

2011

Abstract The co-movements of labor productivity with output, total hours, vacancies and unemployment have changed since the mid 1980s. This paper offers an explanation for the sharp break in the fluctuations of labor market variables based on endogenous labor supply decisions following the mortgage market deregulation. We set up a search model with efficient bargaining and financial frictions, in which impatient borrowers can take an amount of credit that cannot exceed a proportion of the expected value of their real estate holdings. When borrowers' equity requirements are low, the impact of a positive technology shock on the marginal utility of consumption is strengthened, which in turn re…

Economics and EconometricsSupplyLabour economicsControl and OptimizationLeverage (finance)Technology shockApplied MathematicsSecondary labor marketmedia_common.quotation_subjectjel:E32jel:E44Real estatejel:E24UnemploymentEconomicsbusiness cycle labor market borrowing restrictionsMarginal utilityHousehold debtmedia_commonJournal of Economic Dynamics and Control
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Fiscal Rules and Macroeconomic Stability

2005

In this paper we analyze the impact of fiscal rules on the effectiveness of fiscal policy as a macroeconomic stabilizing instrument. First, we review the available evidence on the effects of fiscal policy to affect output in the short run and real interest rates and investment and growth in the long run, and we show how the use of fiscal rules has proved useful in restraining debt and deficits. Secondly, we discuss if debt consolidation rules trade off higher output instability in exchange for lower deficits, using three alternative representations of the intertemporal substitution mechanism in a SDGE framework. Our main conclusion is that both the impact of discretionary fiscal policy and …

Fiscal rules output volatility automatic stabilizers.fiscal rulesoutput volatilityautomatic stabilizersjel:E32jel:E52jel:E63Hacienda Pública Española/Revista de Economía Pública
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Banking Competition, Collateral Constraints and Optimal Monetary Policy

2013

We analyze optimal monetary policy in a model with two distinct financial frictions. First, borrowing is subject to collateral constraints. Second, credit flows are intermediated by monopolistically competitive banks, thus giving rise to endogenous lending spreads. We show that, up to a second order approximation, welfare maximization is equivalent to stabilization of four goals: inflation, output gap, the consumption gap between constrained and unconstrained agents, and the distribution of the collateralizable asset between both groups. Following both financial and non-financial shocks, the optimal monetary policy commitment implies a short-run trade-off between stabilization goals. Such p…

InflationConsumption (economics)Economics and EconometricsCollateralmedia_common.quotation_subjectMonetary policyjel:E32Maximizationjel:E52Monetary economicsjel:G10jel:G21Competition (economics)Orders of approximationOutput gapAccountingEconomicsAsset (economics)banking competition lending spreads collateral constraints monetary policy linear-quadratic methodWelfareFinancemedia_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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Inflation dynamics in a model with firm entry and (some) heterogeneity

2014

We analyse the incidence of endogenous entry and firm TFP-heterogeneity on the response of aggregate inflation to exogenous shocks. We build up an otherwise standard DSGE model in which the number of firms is endogenously determined and firms differ in their steady state level of productivity. This splits the industry structure into firms of different sizes. Calibrating the different transition rates, across firm sizes and out of the market we reproduce the main features of the distribution of firms in Spain. We then compare the inflation response to technology, interest rate and entry cost shocks, among others. We find that structures in which large (more productive) firms predominate tend…

InflationMacroeconomicsbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectfirm dynamics industrial structure inflation business cycles.Distribution (economics)jel:E32Monetary economicsjel:E31Interest ratejel:L11Entry costjel:L16EconomicsBusiness cycleDynamic stochastic general equilibriumSteady state levelbusinessProductivitymedia_common
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