The terms of trade and the real exchange rate of the US appreciate when the US labor productivity increases relative to the rest of the world. This finding is at odds with predictions from standard international macroeconomic models. In this paper, we find that incorporating news shocks to total factor productivity (TFP) in an otherwise standard dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) model with variable capital utilization can help the model replicate the above empirical finding. Labor productivity increases in our model after a positive news shock to TFP because of an increase in capital utilization. Under some plausible calibrations, the wealth effect of good news about future productivity can increase domestic demand strongly and ...
Abstract. An implication of two-country international real business cycle mod-els is that total fact...
The business cycles of advanced economies are synchronized. Standard macro models fail to explain th...
Positive investment comovements across OECD economies as observed in the data are difficult to repli...
This paper investigates the international transmission of productivity shocks in a sample of ve G7...
This paper argues that it is important to distinguish surprise and anticipated components of total f...
Identifying productivity and real demand shocks in the US with sign restrictions based on standard t...
This paper studies the international transmission effects of the news about the Total Factor Product...
<p>This dissertation consists of two chapters on international business cycles. In the first chapter...
This paper investigates the international dimension of productivity and demand shocks to US manufact...
An implication of two-country international real business cycle mod- els is that total factor produc...
This paper examines whether productivity news shocks were among the drivers of the Great Recession. ...
This paper shows that standard international business cycle models can be reconciled with the empir...
Estimates of effects of changes in government purchases are provided, for the G7 countries, during t...
In this paper, we first set up a model that incorporates firm dynamics into the Global Economy Model...
This paper analyzes the international transmission and welfare implications of productivity gains a...
Abstract. An implication of two-country international real business cycle mod-els is that total fact...
The business cycles of advanced economies are synchronized. Standard macro models fail to explain th...
Positive investment comovements across OECD economies as observed in the data are difficult to repli...
This paper investigates the international transmission of productivity shocks in a sample of ve G7...
This paper argues that it is important to distinguish surprise and anticipated components of total f...
Identifying productivity and real demand shocks in the US with sign restrictions based on standard t...
This paper studies the international transmission effects of the news about the Total Factor Product...
<p>This dissertation consists of two chapters on international business cycles. In the first chapter...
This paper investigates the international dimension of productivity and demand shocks to US manufact...
An implication of two-country international real business cycle mod- els is that total factor produc...
This paper examines whether productivity news shocks were among the drivers of the Great Recession. ...
This paper shows that standard international business cycle models can be reconciled with the empir...
Estimates of effects of changes in government purchases are provided, for the G7 countries, during t...
In this paper, we first set up a model that incorporates firm dynamics into the Global Economy Model...
This paper analyzes the international transmission and welfare implications of productivity gains a...
Abstract. An implication of two-country international real business cycle mod-els is that total fact...
The business cycles of advanced economies are synchronized. Standard macro models fail to explain th...
Positive investment comovements across OECD economies as observed in the data are difficult to repli...