This paper shows that a standard Real Business Cycle model driven by productivity shocks can successfully account for the 50 percent decline in cyclical volatility of output and its components, and labor input that has occurred since 1983. The model is successful because the volatility of productivity shocks has also declined significantly over the same time period. We then investigate whether the decline in the volatility of the Solow Residual is due to changes in the volatility of some other shock operating through a channel that is absent in the standard model. We therefore develop a model with variable capacity and labor utilization. We investigate whether government spending shocks, shocks that affect the household’s first order condit...
This paper presents evidence from the US economy on the propagation mech-anism and on the impulses t...
The Real Business Cycle (RBC) research program has grown specularly over the last decade, as its con...
Abstract: Curiously and in spite of its name, very few business cycle theories actually treat it as ...
JEL No. E3 This paper shows that a standard Real Business Cycle model driven by productivity shocks ...
In the 1930s, Dunlop and Tarshis observed that the correlation between hours worked and the return t...
*I am grateful to Ian Dew-Becker and Chris Taylor for inspired research assistance, extended through...
What shocks account for the business cycle frequency and long run movements of output and prices? Th...
How well do current business-cycle models explain historical output fluctuations? Almost a decade ha...
Standard stochastic growth models provide theoretical restrictions on output decomposition which can...
Standard stochastic growth models provide theoretical restrictions on output decomposition which can...
Standard stochastic growth models provide theoretical restrictions on output decomposition which can...
This paper investigates the sensitivity of Solow residual based measures of technology shocks to lab...
In this paper we re-examine the recent evidence that technology shocks do not produce business cycle...
Measured productivity is strongly procyclical. Real business cycle theories suggest that actual fluc...
Measured productivity is strongly procyclical. Real business cycle theories suggest that actual fluc...
This paper presents evidence from the US economy on the propagation mech-anism and on the impulses t...
The Real Business Cycle (RBC) research program has grown specularly over the last decade, as its con...
Abstract: Curiously and in spite of its name, very few business cycle theories actually treat it as ...
JEL No. E3 This paper shows that a standard Real Business Cycle model driven by productivity shocks ...
In the 1930s, Dunlop and Tarshis observed that the correlation between hours worked and the return t...
*I am grateful to Ian Dew-Becker and Chris Taylor for inspired research assistance, extended through...
What shocks account for the business cycle frequency and long run movements of output and prices? Th...
How well do current business-cycle models explain historical output fluctuations? Almost a decade ha...
Standard stochastic growth models provide theoretical restrictions on output decomposition which can...
Standard stochastic growth models provide theoretical restrictions on output decomposition which can...
Standard stochastic growth models provide theoretical restrictions on output decomposition which can...
This paper investigates the sensitivity of Solow residual based measures of technology shocks to lab...
In this paper we re-examine the recent evidence that technology shocks do not produce business cycle...
Measured productivity is strongly procyclical. Real business cycle theories suggest that actual fluc...
Measured productivity is strongly procyclical. Real business cycle theories suggest that actual fluc...
This paper presents evidence from the US economy on the propagation mech-anism and on the impulses t...
The Real Business Cycle (RBC) research program has grown specularly over the last decade, as its con...
Abstract: Curiously and in spite of its name, very few business cycle theories actually treat it as ...