TECHNOLOGY SHOCKS OR COLORED NOISE? WHY REAL-BUSINESS-CYCLE MODELS CANNOT EXPLAIN ACTUAL BUSINESS CYCLES
Typically real-business-cycle models are assessed by their ability to mimic the covariances and variances of actual business cycle data. Recently, however, advocates of RBC models have used them to fit the historical path of real GDP using the Solow residual as a driving process. We demonstrate that the success of RBC models at matching historical GDP data does not confirm the validity of RBC models. Through simulations we demonstrate that the Solow residual does not carry useful information about technology shocks and that the RBC model does not add incremental information about GDP. RBC models fit historical GDP data entirely because the Solow residual is itself just a noisy measure of GDP.
Authors: | Hoover, Kevin D. ; Salyer, Kevin D. |
---|---|
Institutions: | Economics Department, University of California-Davis |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
A New Application of Taylor Rules: Model Evaluation
Salyer, Kevin D.,
-
Calibration and the Volatility of Labor: A Cautionary Note
Salyer, Kevin D.,
-
DATA MINING RECONSIDERED: ENCOMPASSING AND THE GENERAL-TO-SPECIFIC APPROACH TO SPECIFICATION SEARCH
Hoover, Kevin D.,
- More ...