We investigate the relative roles of monetary policy and shocks in causing the Great Moderation, using indirect inference where a DSGE model is tested for its ability to mimic a VAR describing the data. A New Keynesian model with a Taylor Rule and one with the Optimal Timeless Rule are both tested. The latter easily dominates, whether calibrated or estimated, implying that the Fed's policy in the 1970s was neither inadequate nor a cause of indeterminacy; it was both optimal and essentially unchanged during the 1980s. By implication it was largely the reduced shocks that caused the Great Moderation - among them monetary policy shocks the Fed injected into inflation
The modern New Keynesian literature discusses the stabilizing properties of Taylor-type interest rat...
Using a small-scale microfounded DSGE model with Markov switching in shock variances and policy para...
The Great Moderation is often characterized by the decline in the variability of output and inflatio...
We investigate the relative roles of monetary policy and shocks in causing the Great Moderation, usi...
Using indirect inference based on a VAR we confront US data from 1972 to 2007 with a standard New Ke...
Using indirect inference based on a VAR this thesis confronts the US data from 1972 to 2007 with a s...
We calibrate a standard New Keynesian model with three alternative representations of monetary polic...
We calibrate a standard New Keynesian model with three alternative representations of monetary polic...
This paper compares the empirical fit of a Taylor rule featuring constant versus time-varying inflat...
This paper tests “Bad Policy” Hypothesis which refers to the Great Moderation in the US. We examine ...
We compare three standard New Keynesian models differing only in their representations of monetary p...
We compare three standard New Keynesian models differing only in their representations of monetary p...
We study the sources of the Great Moderation by estimating a variety of medium-scale DSGE models tha...
The monetary economics literature has highlighted four issues that are important in evaluating US mo...
We review the methods used in many papers to evaluate DSGE models by comparing their simulated momen...
The modern New Keynesian literature discusses the stabilizing properties of Taylor-type interest rat...
Using a small-scale microfounded DSGE model with Markov switching in shock variances and policy para...
The Great Moderation is often characterized by the decline in the variability of output and inflatio...
We investigate the relative roles of monetary policy and shocks in causing the Great Moderation, usi...
Using indirect inference based on a VAR we confront US data from 1972 to 2007 with a standard New Ke...
Using indirect inference based on a VAR this thesis confronts the US data from 1972 to 2007 with a s...
We calibrate a standard New Keynesian model with three alternative representations of monetary polic...
We calibrate a standard New Keynesian model with three alternative representations of monetary polic...
This paper compares the empirical fit of a Taylor rule featuring constant versus time-varying inflat...
This paper tests “Bad Policy” Hypothesis which refers to the Great Moderation in the US. We examine ...
We compare three standard New Keynesian models differing only in their representations of monetary p...
We compare three standard New Keynesian models differing only in their representations of monetary p...
We study the sources of the Great Moderation by estimating a variety of medium-scale DSGE models tha...
The monetary economics literature has highlighted four issues that are important in evaluating US mo...
We review the methods used in many papers to evaluate DSGE models by comparing their simulated momen...
The modern New Keynesian literature discusses the stabilizing properties of Taylor-type interest rat...
Using a small-scale microfounded DSGE model with Markov switching in shock variances and policy para...
The Great Moderation is often characterized by the decline in the variability of output and inflatio...