Economies respond differently to aggregate shocks that reduce output. While some countries rapidly recover their pre-crisis trend, others stagnate. Recent studies provide empirical support for a link between aggregate growth and plant dynamics through its effect on productivity: the entry and exit of firms and the reallocation of resources from less to more efficient firms explain a relevant part of transitional productivity dynamics. In this paper we use a stochastic general equilibrium model with heterogeneous firms to study the effect on aggregate short-run growth of policies that distort the process of birth, growth and death of firms, as well as the reallocation of resources across economic units. Our findings show that indeed policies...
This paper uses an integrated model of aggregate supply to analyze the post-1973 slowdown in product...
In the aftermath of the recent financial crisis and subsequent recession, slow recoveries have been ...
Developing countries frequently face large adverse shocks to their economies. We study two distinct ...
Economies respond differently to aggregate shocks that reduce output. While some countries rapidly r...
We study episodes where economic growth decelerates to negative rates. While the majority of these e...
On the basis of a comparative growth analysis of ten major industrial countries, it is shown that th...
This paper studies the behavior of recoveries from recessions across 59 advanced and emerging market...
How does an economy’s capital respond to aggregate productivity shocks when firms make lumpy investm...
In an attempt to advance our understanding of the potential long-run benefits of macroeconomic stabi...
We examine the hypothesis that the slowdown in productivity following the Great Recession was in sig...
We analyze the productivity effects of shocks to the real interest rate and to demand and supply co...
This paper studies a simple endogenous growth model to explain growth slowdowns. It is designed to e...
This paper presents evidence on the relationship between cyclical shocks and productivity growth, fo...
We characterize the behavior of disaggregate manufacturing sectors for a large set of developed and ...
The U.S. recession that began in July 1990 may have ended in April or May 1991. The pace of the subs...
This paper uses an integrated model of aggregate supply to analyze the post-1973 slowdown in product...
In the aftermath of the recent financial crisis and subsequent recession, slow recoveries have been ...
Developing countries frequently face large adverse shocks to their economies. We study two distinct ...
Economies respond differently to aggregate shocks that reduce output. While some countries rapidly r...
We study episodes where economic growth decelerates to negative rates. While the majority of these e...
On the basis of a comparative growth analysis of ten major industrial countries, it is shown that th...
This paper studies the behavior of recoveries from recessions across 59 advanced and emerging market...
How does an economy’s capital respond to aggregate productivity shocks when firms make lumpy investm...
In an attempt to advance our understanding of the potential long-run benefits of macroeconomic stabi...
We examine the hypothesis that the slowdown in productivity following the Great Recession was in sig...
We analyze the productivity effects of shocks to the real interest rate and to demand and supply co...
This paper studies a simple endogenous growth model to explain growth slowdowns. It is designed to e...
This paper presents evidence on the relationship between cyclical shocks and productivity growth, fo...
We characterize the behavior of disaggregate manufacturing sectors for a large set of developed and ...
The U.S. recession that began in July 1990 may have ended in April or May 1991. The pace of the subs...
This paper uses an integrated model of aggregate supply to analyze the post-1973 slowdown in product...
In the aftermath of the recent financial crisis and subsequent recession, slow recoveries have been ...
Developing countries frequently face large adverse shocks to their economies. We study two distinct ...