International audienceThis paper proposes a theoretical explanation of the positive consumption multipliers of government spending often found in the data. The explanation requires two ingredients. First, labor demand expands (e.g., prices are sticky). Second, general nonseparable preferences over consumption and leisure should be such that the two goods are substitutes; that is, Frisch labor supply elasticity is lower than the constant-consumption elasticity; this implies that constant-consumption labor supply shifts left. Existing empirical evidence on the relative magnitudes of the two elasticities supports this hypothesis. The parametric conditions under which the result occurs are consistent with restrictions of concavity and noninferi...
The paper presents a simple theoretical account of how an increase in government purchases may reduc...
We derive analytic implicit form conditions for the qualitative analysis of government spending mult...
[[abstract]]This paper studies an infinite-horizon two-sector growth model with sector-specific exte...
International audienceThis paper proposes a theoretical explanation of the positive consumption mult...
It has been empirically observed that consumption responds positively to government spending shock, ...
This note studies a form of a utility function of consumption with habit and leisure that (a) is com...
International audienceNonseparable preferences over consumption and leisure can generate an increase...
This note studies a form of a utility function of consumption with habit and leisure that (a) is com...
The equilibrium ramification of a balanced budget rule are scrutinized in a one sector growth model ...
This note studies a form of a utility function of consumption with habit and leisure that (a) is co...
We investigate the role of non-separable preferences on the occurrence of macroeconomic instability ...
The literature on fiscal multipliers has evolved towards the notion that there is no such think asaf...
This paper studies two frictions, good-specific habit formation and price rigidities, used in theore...
Abstract: We extend macroeconomic models of imperfect competition with Keynesian features to allow f...
Many empirical studies report that .fiscal expansions have a positive effect on private consumption....
The paper presents a simple theoretical account of how an increase in government purchases may reduc...
We derive analytic implicit form conditions for the qualitative analysis of government spending mult...
[[abstract]]This paper studies an infinite-horizon two-sector growth model with sector-specific exte...
International audienceThis paper proposes a theoretical explanation of the positive consumption mult...
It has been empirically observed that consumption responds positively to government spending shock, ...
This note studies a form of a utility function of consumption with habit and leisure that (a) is com...
International audienceNonseparable preferences over consumption and leisure can generate an increase...
This note studies a form of a utility function of consumption with habit and leisure that (a) is com...
The equilibrium ramification of a balanced budget rule are scrutinized in a one sector growth model ...
This note studies a form of a utility function of consumption with habit and leisure that (a) is co...
We investigate the role of non-separable preferences on the occurrence of macroeconomic instability ...
The literature on fiscal multipliers has evolved towards the notion that there is no such think asaf...
This paper studies two frictions, good-specific habit formation and price rigidities, used in theore...
Abstract: We extend macroeconomic models of imperfect competition with Keynesian features to allow f...
Many empirical studies report that .fiscal expansions have a positive effect on private consumption....
The paper presents a simple theoretical account of how an increase in government purchases may reduc...
We derive analytic implicit form conditions for the qualitative analysis of government spending mult...
[[abstract]]This paper studies an infinite-horizon two-sector growth model with sector-specific exte...