The standard two-sector monetary business cycle model suffers from an important deficiency. Since durable good prices are more flexible than non-durable good prices, optimising households build up the stock of durable goods at low cost after a monetary contraction. Consequently, sectoral outputs move in opposite directions. This paper finds that labour market frictions help to understand the so-called sectoral “comovement puzzle”. Our benchmark model with staggered Right-to-Manage wage bargaining closely matches the empirical elasticities of output, employment and hours per worker across sectors. The model with Nash bargaining, in contrast, predicts that firms adjust employment exclusively along the extensive margin
Macroeconomic models of the economy with rigid wage structures tend to predict unrealistically volat...
Macroeconomic models of the economy with rigid wage structures tend to predict unrealistically volat...
The central issue of this thesis is the macroeconomic implications of adding frictions to an otherwi...
The standard two-sector monetary business cycle model suffers from an important deficiency. Since du...
The standard two-sector monetary business cycle model suffers from an important deficiency. Since dura...
The standard two-sector monetary business cycle model suffers from an important deficiency. Since dura...
The standard two-sector monetary business cycle model suffers from an important deficiency. Since dura...
This paper provides a quantitative answer to the ‘sectoral comovement puzzle’. We extend the two-sec...
We build a model that combines two types of labor market rigidities: real wage rigidities and labor ...
Durable goods pose a challenge for standard sticky-price models because the near constancy of their ...
This paper addresses the role of labor market frictions in the transmission process of sectoral prod...
This paper shows that goods-market frictions drastically change the dynamics of the labor market, br...
This paper shows that goods-market frictions drastically change the dynamics of the labor market, br...
We consider a model with frictional unemployment and staggered wage bargaining where hours worked ar...
We analyze the transmission mechanism of wages to inflation within a New Keynesian business cycle mo...
Macroeconomic models of the economy with rigid wage structures tend to predict unrealistically volat...
Macroeconomic models of the economy with rigid wage structures tend to predict unrealistically volat...
The central issue of this thesis is the macroeconomic implications of adding frictions to an otherwi...
The standard two-sector monetary business cycle model suffers from an important deficiency. Since du...
The standard two-sector monetary business cycle model suffers from an important deficiency. Since dura...
The standard two-sector monetary business cycle model suffers from an important deficiency. Since dura...
The standard two-sector monetary business cycle model suffers from an important deficiency. Since dura...
This paper provides a quantitative answer to the ‘sectoral comovement puzzle’. We extend the two-sec...
We build a model that combines two types of labor market rigidities: real wage rigidities and labor ...
Durable goods pose a challenge for standard sticky-price models because the near constancy of their ...
This paper addresses the role of labor market frictions in the transmission process of sectoral prod...
This paper shows that goods-market frictions drastically change the dynamics of the labor market, br...
This paper shows that goods-market frictions drastically change the dynamics of the labor market, br...
We consider a model with frictional unemployment and staggered wage bargaining where hours worked ar...
We analyze the transmission mechanism of wages to inflation within a New Keynesian business cycle mo...
Macroeconomic models of the economy with rigid wage structures tend to predict unrealistically volat...
Macroeconomic models of the economy with rigid wage structures tend to predict unrealistically volat...
The central issue of this thesis is the macroeconomic implications of adding frictions to an otherwi...