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This article considers the question, raised by Beaudry and Portier in their recent articles, of whether "news shocks" can lead to expansions and contractions that look like business cycle movements. News shocks are to be thought of solely as affecting expectations (regarding future events) and...
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Andreas Hornstein (Richmond Fed economist and vice president), Per Krusell (economics professor, University of Rochester, and Richmond Fed visiting scholar), and Giovanni L. Violante (assistant professor of economics, New York University) review recent research on a widely used search model of...
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The skill premium — the wage of skilled labor relative to the wage of unskilled labor — has increased substantially in the United States since the 1970s. The higher skill premium has been attributed to skill-biased factor-specific technical change or to capital accumulation when skilled...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013097097
We argue that a 2-agent version of the standard New Keynesian model—where a “worker” receives only labor income and a “capitalist” only profit income— offers insights about how income inequality affects the monetary transmission mechanism. Under rigid prices, monetary policy affects...
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