According to the textbook Keynesian model, short-run demand for labor is sensitive to the demand for goods. In this view, sellers deviate from setting the marginal product of labor proportional to the real wage, instead enduring or choosing lower price markups when demand for goods is high. We test this prediction across U.S. industries in the two decades up through the Great Recession. To identify movements in goods demand, we exploit how durability varies across 70 categories of consumption and investment. We also take into account the flexibility of prices and capital-intensity of production across goods. We fin
A canonical labor matching model with sticky prices but flexible real wages can match movements in l...
We construct a New Keynesian Phillips curve (NKPC) in which the inflation fundamental is nominal uni...
Demand shocks likely play a key role in driving business cycles. However, in the standard newkeynesi...
A leading proximate explanation for plunging employment during the Great Recession is plummeting dem...
This paper provides a quantitative answer to the ‘sectoral comovement puzzle’. We extend the two-sec...
Neoclassical theory presumes that the demand for labor is a function of its real wage. Many local de...
This paper describes a model with sticky prices, search frictions and hours-clearing wages that prov...
A labor matching model with nominal rigidities can match short-run movements in labor’s share with s...
In this paper, we outline the cost minimizing behavior of oligopoly firms and the price adjustment p...
This paper investigates theoretical implications from a new Keynesian model focusing on the labor ma...
Building a model with three imperfect markets - goods, labor and credit - representing a product's l...
This dissertation develops and tests a model of the effect of workers' consumption commitments on la...
In this paper, I build on the Keynesian analysis of the market for goods to draw some implications o...
The New Keynesian Phillips curve explains inflation dynamics as being driven by current and expected...
Following the Farmer’s (2008a-b, 2010) micro-foundation of the General Theory, I build a competitive...
A canonical labor matching model with sticky prices but flexible real wages can match movements in l...
We construct a New Keynesian Phillips curve (NKPC) in which the inflation fundamental is nominal uni...
Demand shocks likely play a key role in driving business cycles. However, in the standard newkeynesi...
A leading proximate explanation for plunging employment during the Great Recession is plummeting dem...
This paper provides a quantitative answer to the ‘sectoral comovement puzzle’. We extend the two-sec...
Neoclassical theory presumes that the demand for labor is a function of its real wage. Many local de...
This paper describes a model with sticky prices, search frictions and hours-clearing wages that prov...
A labor matching model with nominal rigidities can match short-run movements in labor’s share with s...
In this paper, we outline the cost minimizing behavior of oligopoly firms and the price adjustment p...
This paper investigates theoretical implications from a new Keynesian model focusing on the labor ma...
Building a model with three imperfect markets - goods, labor and credit - representing a product's l...
This dissertation develops and tests a model of the effect of workers' consumption commitments on la...
In this paper, I build on the Keynesian analysis of the market for goods to draw some implications o...
The New Keynesian Phillips curve explains inflation dynamics as being driven by current and expected...
Following the Farmer’s (2008a-b, 2010) micro-foundation of the General Theory, I build a competitive...
A canonical labor matching model with sticky prices but flexible real wages can match movements in l...
We construct a New Keynesian Phillips curve (NKPC) in which the inflation fundamental is nominal uni...
Demand shocks likely play a key role in driving business cycles. However, in the standard newkeynesi...