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We construct a dynamic general equilibrium model in which household debt is sticky in nominal terms and debtor households are credit constrained. Interest payments on debt contracts may be at floating rates or fixed for the duration of the contract. A key result is that a simple static Taylor...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005459100
Information is "market-consistent" if agents only use market prices to infer the underlying states of the economy. This paper applies this concept to a stochastic growth model with incomplete markets and heterogeneous agents. The economy with market-consistent information can never replicate the...
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Rational expectations solutions are usually derived by assuming that all state variables relevant to forward-looking behaviour are directly observable, or that they are "...an invertible function of observables" (Mehra and Prescott, 1980). Using a framework that nests linearised DSGE models, we...
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Nearly all post-war recessions were preceded by oil-price shocks, but is this because spikes in the price of oil cause economic downturns? At the heart of this question lies an identification problem: oil prices and the state of the world economy are endogenously determined. This paper uses...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005498032
Models with habit formation in consumption have proved useful in understanding a number of macroeconomic features. The key finding of this paper is that, when households can use their labor supply to smooth consumption, habit formation worsens a dynamic model's response to both monetary and...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005107655
In this paper, we develop an explanation for why events in one market may trigger similar events in other markets, even though at first sight the markets appear to be only weakly related. We allow for escape dynamics in each market, and show that an escape in one market is contagious because it...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005027353