In this paper, we study the relative importance of demand and technology shocks in generating business cycle fluctuations, both at the aggregate level and at the level of individual industries. We construct a New Keynesian DSGE model that is highly disaggregated at the industry level with an input-output network structure. Measured productivity in the model fluctuates in response to both technology and demand shocks due to endogenous factor utilization. We estimate the model by the simulated method of moments using U.S. industry data from 1960 to 2005. We find that the aggregate technology shock has zero variance. Exogenous shocks to technology are necessary for our model to fit the data, but these shocks are exclusively industry-specifi...
This paper investigates the importance of technology shock in explaining fluctuations over business ...
How well do current business-cycle models explain historical output fluctuations? Almost a decade ha...
We consider how and the extent to which a pure technology shock driven by R&D activities impacts on ...
In this paper, we study the relative importance of demand and technology shocks in generating busine...
In this paper, we study the relative importance of demand and technology shocks in generating busine...
This paper argues that factor demand linkages are crucial in the transmission of both sectoral and a...
This paper argues that factor demand linkages can be important for the transmission of both sectoral...
This paper investigates the drivers of industry and aggregate fluctuations. We model the dynamics of...
Standard stochastic growth models provide theoretical restrictions on output decomposition which can...
We develop and estimate a DSGE model which realistically assumes that many goods in the economy are ...
A class of real business cycle models suggests that shocks to technology can explain aggregate fluct...
Measured productivity is strongly procyclical. Real business cycle theories suggest that actual fluc...
What shocks account for the business cycle frequency and long run movements of output and prices? Th...
When capacity utilization is allowed to vary, standard equilibrium theory predicts that demand shock...
In this paper we re-examine the recent evidence that technology shocks do not produce business cycle...
This paper investigates the importance of technology shock in explaining fluctuations over business ...
How well do current business-cycle models explain historical output fluctuations? Almost a decade ha...
We consider how and the extent to which a pure technology shock driven by R&D activities impacts on ...
In this paper, we study the relative importance of demand and technology shocks in generating busine...
In this paper, we study the relative importance of demand and technology shocks in generating busine...
This paper argues that factor demand linkages are crucial in the transmission of both sectoral and a...
This paper argues that factor demand linkages can be important for the transmission of both sectoral...
This paper investigates the drivers of industry and aggregate fluctuations. We model the dynamics of...
Standard stochastic growth models provide theoretical restrictions on output decomposition which can...
We develop and estimate a DSGE model which realistically assumes that many goods in the economy are ...
A class of real business cycle models suggests that shocks to technology can explain aggregate fluct...
Measured productivity is strongly procyclical. Real business cycle theories suggest that actual fluc...
What shocks account for the business cycle frequency and long run movements of output and prices? Th...
When capacity utilization is allowed to vary, standard equilibrium theory predicts that demand shock...
In this paper we re-examine the recent evidence that technology shocks do not produce business cycle...
This paper investigates the importance of technology shock in explaining fluctuations over business ...
How well do current business-cycle models explain historical output fluctuations? Almost a decade ha...
We consider how and the extent to which a pure technology shock driven by R&D activities impacts on ...