Chapter 19/Epilogue: Advances in the Theory of Macroeconomic Fluctuations. Instructor: Dmytro Hryshko

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Chapter 19/Epilogue: Advances in the Theory of Macroeconomic Fluctuations Instructor: Dmytro Hryshko

Two Approaches We can summarize theories of business cycles by their view of functioning of the economy's markets. The real business cycle theory (RBC) postulates that the economy's markets clear continuously; prices are fully exible and do not aect the real variables (monetary neutrality). New Keynesian theory emphasizes the price and/or wage stickiness in the short run. Thus, uctuations are caused by the stickiness of the prices/wages, and nominal monetary shocks can be transmitted to the changes in the real variables.

Implications: RBC The economy's uctuations reect its ecient responses to real technological supply shocks. In terms of production function Y t = Z t K t (E t L t ) 1 Y t = Z t E 1 K t t {z } L1 : t A t those shocks are realizations of the Z t process. The natural rate of unemployment is uctuating since A t is uctuating. Fiscal/monetry policies are largely ineective.

Figure 19.1 Growth in Output and the Solow Residual Mankiw: Macroeconomics, Sixth Edition Copyright 2007 by Worth Publishers

Implications: New Keynesian Theories Aggregate uctuations are caused by demand shocks. Aggregate demand is identied from the IS{LM model. Need to build micro-foundations for the aggregate supply and the sources of stickiness.

RBC The parable of Robinson Crusoe. Why? Since there is no money and all of the shocks are real. E.g.: Population of sh in the nearby waters suddenly rises. Weather shocks. Attacks by natives. Changes in C, I, L (labor and, therefore, leisure), and Y ecient responses to the (real) shocks. are

Ex.: storm (temporary shock). A t #, M P L and current wages #, cut current working hours (more leisure now), C #, I # (since want to smooth consumption over time). Ex.: a big school of sh in the nearby waters (temporary shock). A t ", M P L and current wages ", increase working time and cut leisure time, C ", I " (since want to smooth consumption over time).

RBC Model: The Intertemporal Substitution of Labor The intertemporal substitution of labor the willingness to reallocate work over time should be substantial. Not true in micro data. The incentive to reallocate labor between dierent periods is guided by the intertemporal relative wage: W 1 (1+r) W 2. Thus, shocks that cause r to increase or make W 1 temporarily high, increase work eort in period 1, and decrease the rst period amount of leisure.

RBC Model: the Importance of Tech. Shocks Shocks to A t are the main ingredient of RBC models, and the main source of the models' aggregate uctuations. Opponents: are recessions the periods of the technological regress? Also, technological shocks are not well measured, and in reality they are less pro-cyclical than the Solow residual. Proponents: adverse shocks to the `technology' (Solow residual) should be interpreted broadly. E.g., strict regulations, weather shocks, shocks to prices of raw materials (e.g., oil price shocks).

Money Neutrality Is money neutral in the short run? To answer the question, need exogenous shocks to money supply in order to establish the causality between money and output. Hard to nd really exogenous shocks...

In the data: changes in money supply correlate with the changes in money supply. (Real shocks )) M ; Y (( Real shocks) (RBC) M ) (nominal frictions: sticky wages/prices) ) Y (Keynes./Monetar.) To prove that M ) Y (that is, money causes output) need to nd an exogenous variation in M, that is, the variation not aected by the news of future productivity or by current real shocks.

Measurement of the TFP Suppose Y = AK L 1. Then, A = Y A Y K K + (1 ) L L : Inputs are utilized with dierent intensity over the business cycle. Consider Y = AK (ul) 1, where u is the utilization rate of L. Then, A = Y A Y K K + (1 ) L + (1 ) u L u : The TFP measure will become less procyclical when u during expansions and u < 0 during recessions. u u > 0

New Keynesian Theories Rationalize the stickiness of prices and wages. 1 Menu costs 2 Recessions as coordination failures 3 Staggering of wages and prices: individual wages and prices change frequently but at dierent points in time, and so aggregate prices and wages adjust sluggishly.

Is There a Consensus on Key Macroeconomic Issues? 1 In the long run, the economy's technology and availability of the factors of production determines the well-being of its citizens. 2 In the short run, aggregate demand determines the amount of goods and services the economy produces, and the well-being of its citizens. 3 In the long run, the rate of money growth determines the rate of ination, but it does not aect the (natural) rate of unemployment. 4 In the short run, policymakers face a tradeo between ination and unemployment.

Consensus on Policy Issues? 1 How to promote growth in the natural (trend) level of output? 2 Stabilizing potential of discretionary scal policy is at best limited and the role of scal policy lies embedded in automatic stabilizers (problem 1, set 5; Snowdon and Vane, 2005: handout). 3 Shift of focus towards monetary policy as the main tool of stabilization policy (Snowdon and Vane, 2005; Goodfriend and King, 1997). 4 Stabilization policy is viewed as a game theoretic problem: policy aects expectations and therefore outcomes. Issues of policymakers' credibility are important. 5 Is government budget decit a problem?