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This paper proposes a novel way of formulating priors for estimating economic models. System priors are priors about the model's features and behavior as a system, such as the sacrifice ratio or the maximum duration of response of inflation to a particular shock, for instance. System priors represent a very transparent and economically meaningful way of formulating priors about parameters, without the unintended consequences of independent priors about individual parameters. System priors may complement or also substitute for independent marginal priors. The new philosophy of formulating priors is motivated, explained and illustrated using a structural model for monetary policy.
Monetary policy. --- Monetary management --- Economic policy --- Currency boards --- Money supply --- Econometrics --- Macroeconomics --- Money and Monetary Policy --- Monetary Policy --- Computable and Other Applied General Equilibrium Models --- Econometric Modeling: General --- Labor Economics: General --- Econometrics & economic statistics --- Monetary economics --- Labour --- income economics --- Inflation targeting --- Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models --- Econometric models --- Labor --- Monetary policy --- Labor economics --- Income economics
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This paper builds a model-based dynamic monetary and fiscal conditions index (DMFCI) and uses it to examine the evolution of the joint stance of monetary and fiscal policies in the euro area (EA) and in its three largest member countries over the period 2007-2018. The index is based on the relative impacts of monetary and fiscal policy on demand using actual and simulated data from rich estimated models featuring also financial intermediaries and long-term government debt. The analysis highlights a short-lived fiscal expansion in the aftermath of the Global Financial Crisis, followed by a quick tightening, with monetary policy left to be the “only game in town” after 2013. Individual countries’ DMFCIs show that national policy stances did not always mirror the evolution of the aggregate stance at the EA level, due to heterogeneity in the fiscal stance.
Econometrics --- Financial Risk Management --- Macroeconomics --- Public Finance --- Fiscal Policy --- National Government Expenditures and Related Policies: General --- Computable and Other Applied General Equilibrium Models --- Financial Crises --- Public finance & taxation --- Econometrics & economic statistics --- Economic & financial crises & disasters --- Fiscal policy --- Fiscal stance --- Expenditure --- Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models --- Financial crises --- Econometric analysis --- Expenditures, Public --- Econometric models --- Italy
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This paper builds a model-based dynamic monetary and fiscal conditions index (DMFCI) and uses it to examine the evolution of the joint stance of monetary and fiscal policies in the euro area (EA) and in its three largest member countries over the period 2007-2018. The index is based on the relative impacts of monetary and fiscal policy on demand using actual and simulated data from rich estimated models featuring also financial intermediaries and long-term government debt. The analysis highlights a short-lived fiscal expansion in the aftermath of the Global Financial Crisis, followed by a quick tightening, with monetary policy left to be the “only game in town” after 2013. Individual countries’ DMFCIs show that national policy stances did not always mirror the evolution of the aggregate stance at the EA level, due to heterogeneity in the fiscal stance.
Italy --- Econometrics --- Financial Risk Management --- Macroeconomics --- Public Finance --- Fiscal Policy --- National Government Expenditures and Related Policies: General --- Computable and Other Applied General Equilibrium Models --- Financial Crises --- Public finance & taxation --- Econometrics & economic statistics --- Economic & financial crises & disasters --- Fiscal policy --- Fiscal stance --- Expenditure --- Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models --- Financial crises --- Econometric analysis --- Expenditures, Public --- Econometric models
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In recent years, New Keynesian dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (NK DSGE) models have become increasingly popular in the academic literature and in policy analysis. However, the success of these models in reproducing the dynamic behavior of an economy following structural shocks is still disputed. This paper attempts to shed light on this issue. We use a VAR with sign restrictions that are robust to model and parameter uncertainty to estimate the effects of monetary policy, preference, government spending, investment, price markup, technology, and labor supply shocks on macroeconomic variables in the United States and the euro area. In contrast to the NK DSGE models, the empirical results indicate that technology shocks have a positive effect on hours worked, and investment and preference shocks have a positive impact on consumption and investment, respectively. While the former is in line with the predictions of Real Business Cycle models, the latter indicates the relevance of accelerator effects, as described by earlier Keynesian models. We also show that NK DSGE models might overemphasize the contribution of cost-push shocks to business cycle fluctuations while, at the same time, underestimating the importance of other shocks such as changes to technology and investment adjustment costs.
Econometrics --- Labor --- Public Finance --- Computable and Other Applied General Equilibrium Models --- Demand and Supply of Labor: General --- National Government Expenditures and Related Policies: General --- Innovation --- Research and Development --- Technological Change --- Intellectual Property Rights: General --- Wages, Compensation, and Labor Costs: General --- Econometrics & economic statistics --- Labour --- income economics --- Public finance & taxation --- Technology --- general issues --- Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models --- Labor supply --- Expenditure --- Real wages --- Econometric models --- Labor market --- Expenditures, Public --- Wages --- United States --- General issues --- Income economics
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This paper introduces methods that allow analysts to (i) decompose the estimates of unobserved quantities into observed data, (ii) to better understand revision properties of the model, and (iii) to impose subjective prior constraints on path estimates of unobserved shocks in structural economic models. For instance, a decomposition of the flexible-price output gap, or a technology shock, into contributions of output, inflation, interest rates, and other observed variables' contribution is feasible. The intuitive nature and analytical clarity of the suggested procedures are appealing for policy-related and forecasting models.
Economic forecasting. --- Monetary policy --- Monetary management --- Economic policy --- Currency boards --- Money supply --- Economics --- Forecasting --- Economic indicators --- Econometrics. --- Econometrics --- Inflation --- Production and Operations Management --- Econometric and Statistical Methods: General --- Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit: General --- Macroeconomics: Production --- Computable and Other Applied General Equilibrium Models --- Forecasting and Other Model Applications --- Price Level --- Deflation --- Macroeconomics --- Econometrics & economic statistics --- Economic Forecasting --- Output gap --- Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models --- Economic forecasting --- Production --- Economic theory --- Econometric models --- Prices
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In a SVAR model of the US, the response of the relative price of durables to a monetary contraction is either flat or mildly positive. It significantly falls only if narrowly defined as the ratio between new-house and nondurables prices. These findings are rationalized via the estimation of a two-sector New-Keynesian (NK) models. Durables prices are estimated to be as sticky as nondurables, leading to a flat relative price response to a monetary shock. Conversely, house prices are estimated to be almost flexible. Such results survive several robustness checks and a three-sector extension of the NK model. These findings have implications for building two-sector NK models with durable and nondurable goods, and for the conduct of monetary policy.
Monetary policy. --- Monetary management --- Economic policy --- Currency boards --- Money supply --- Econometrics --- Infrastructure --- Macroeconomics --- Real Estate --- Inflation --- Price Level --- Deflation --- Economic Development: Urban, Rural, Regional, and Transportation Analysis --- Housing --- Housing Supply and Markets --- Macroeconomics: Consumption --- Saving --- Wealth --- Computable and Other Applied General Equilibrium Models --- Monetary Policy --- Business Fluctuations --- Cycles --- Property & real estate --- Econometrics & economic statistics --- Sticky prices --- Housing prices --- Consumption --- Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models --- Prices --- National accounts --- Saving and investment --- Economics --- Econometric models --- United States
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This paper contributes to the debate on the role of money in monetary policy by analyzing the information content of money in forecasting euro-area inflation. We compare the predictive performance within and among various classes of structural and empirical models in a consistent framework using Bayesian and other estimation techniques. We find that money contains relevant information for inflation in some model classes. Money-based New Keynesian DSGE models and VARs incorporating money perform better than their cashless counterparts. But there are also indications that the contribution of money has its limits. The marginal contribution of money to forecasting accuracy is often small, money adds little to dynamic factor models, and it worsens forecasting accuracy of partial equilibrium models. Finally, non-monetary models dominate monetary models in an all-out horserace.
Monetary policy --- Money --- Inflation (Finance) --- Econometric models. --- Forecasting --- Currency --- Monetary question --- Money, Primitive --- Specie --- Standard of value --- Finance --- Natural rate of unemployment --- Exchange --- Value --- Banks and banking --- Coinage --- Currency question --- Gold --- Silver --- Silver question --- Wealth --- Econometrics --- Inflation --- Money and Monetary Policy --- Forecasting and Other Model Applications --- Price Level --- Deflation --- Computable and Other Applied General Equilibrium Models --- Classification Methods --- Cluster Analysis --- Principal Components --- Factor Models --- Demand for Money --- Economic Forecasting --- Macroeconomics --- Econometrics & economic statistics --- Monetary economics --- Economic forecasting --- Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models --- Factor models --- Demand for money --- Prices --- Econometric models --- New Zealand
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Dynamic factor models and dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) models are widely used for empirical research in macroeconomics. The empirical factor literature argues that the co-movement of large panels of macroeconomic and financial data can be captured by relatively few common unobserved factors. Similarly, the dynamics in DSGE models are often governed by a handful of state variables and exogenous processes such as preference and/or technology shocks. Boivin and Giannoni(2006) combine a DSGE and a factor model into a data-rich DSGE model, in which DSGE states are factors and factor dynamics are subject to DSGE model implied restrictions. We compare a data-richDSGE model with a standard New Keynesian core to an empirical dynamic factor model by estimating both on a rich panel of U.S. macroeconomic and financial data compiled by Stock and Watson (2008).We find that the spaces spanned by the empirical factors and by the data-rich DSGE model states are very close. This proximity allows us to propagate monetary policy and technology innovations in an otherwise non-structural dynamic factor model to obtain predictions for many more series than just a handful of traditional macro variables, including measures of real activity, price indices, labor market indicators, interest rate spreads, money and credit stocks, and exchange rates.
Macroeconomics --- Equilibrium (Economics) --- Econometric models. --- Econometrics --- Inflation --- Investments: Stocks --- Bayesian Analysis: General --- Time-Series Models --- Dynamic Quantile Regressions --- Dynamic Treatment Effect Models --- Diffusion Processes --- State Space Models --- Business Fluctuations --- Cycles --- Prices, Business Fluctuations, and Cycles: Forecasting and Simulation --- Computable and Other Applied General Equilibrium Models --- Classification Methods --- Cluster Analysis --- Principal Components --- Factor Models --- Price Level --- Deflation --- Pension Funds --- Non-bank Financial Institutions --- Financial Instruments --- Institutional Investors --- Macroeconomics: Consumption --- Saving --- Wealth --- Econometrics & economic statistics --- Investment & securities --- Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models --- Factor models --- Stocks --- Consumption --- Econometric analysis --- Prices --- Financial institutions --- National accounts --- Econometric models --- Economics --- United States
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VAR methods suggest that the monetary transmission mechanism may be weak and unreliable in low-income countries (LICs). But are structural VARs identified via short-run restrictions capable of detecting a transmission mechanism when one exists, under research conditions typical of these countries? Using small DSGEs as data-generating processes, we assess the impact on VAR-based inference of short data samples, measurement error, high-frequency supply shocks, and other features of the LIC environment. The impact of these features on finite-sample bias appears to be relatively modest when identification is valid—a strong caveat, especially in LICs. However, many of these features undermine the precision of estimated impulse responses to monetary policy shocks, and cumulatively they suggest that “insignificant” results can be expected even when the underlying transmission mechanism is strong.
Monetary policy --- Transmission mechanism (Monetary policy) --- Econometric models. --- Monetary transmission mechanism --- Agriculture: Aggregate Supply and Demand Analysis --- Computable and Other Applied General Equilibrium Models --- Diffusion Processes --- Dynamic Quantile Regressions --- Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models --- Dynamic Treatment Effect Models --- Econometric analysis --- Econometric models --- Econometrics & economic statistics --- Econometrics --- Economic theory & philosophy --- Economic Theory --- Economic theory --- Environment --- Environmental Economics --- Environmental economics --- Environmental Economics: General --- Environmental sciences --- Fiscal and Monetary Policy in Development --- Macroeconomic Analyses of Economic Development --- Monetary Policy --- Money and Interest Rates: Forecasting and Simulation --- Prices --- State Space Models --- Structural vector autoregression --- Supply and demand --- Supply shocks --- Time-Series Models --- Vector autoregression --- Kenya
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This paper studies how and why inflation expectations have changed since the emergence of Covid-19. Using micro-level data from the University of Michigan Survey of Consumers, we show that the distribution of consumer expectations at one-year and five-ten year horizons has widened since the surge of inflation during 2021, along with the mean. Persistently high and heterogeneous expectations of consumers with less education and lower income are mainly responsible. A simple model of adaptive learning is able to mimic the change in inflation expectations over time for different demographic groups. The inflation expectations of low income and female consumers are consistent with using less complex forecasting models and are more backward-looking. A medium-scale DSGE model with adaptive learning, estimated during 1965-2022, has a time-varying solution that produces lower forecast errors for inflation than a variant with rational expectations. The estimated model interprets the surge of inflation in 2021 mainly as the result of a price markup shock, which is more persistent and requires a larger and more persistent monetary policy response than under rational expectations.
Aggregate Factor Income Distribution --- Computable and Other Applied General Equilibrium Models --- Currency crises --- Deflation --- Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models --- Econometric analysis --- Econometric models --- Econometrics & economic statistics --- Econometrics --- Economic & financial crises & disasters --- Economic Forecasting --- Economic forecasting --- Economic theory & philosophy --- Economic Theory --- Economic theory --- Economics of specific sectors --- Economics --- Economics: General --- Expectations --- Financial Institutions and Services: General --- Financial Instruments --- Forecasting and Other Model Applications --- Forecasting --- Income --- Inflation --- Informal sector --- Institutional Investors --- Macroeconomics --- Monetary Policy --- National accounts --- Non-bank Financial Institutions --- Pension Funds --- Price Level --- Prices --- Rational expectations --- Speculations
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