Empirical evidence shows demand shocks tend to have an asymmetric effect on output: it falls by a larger amount with a contraction than it rises with an expansion. We argue that introducing nominal rigidities in a framework where agents maximise their welfare can yield such an asymmetric outcome. We show that this is the case in the Sticky Prices framework, where each period an exogenously set fraction of firms fails to adjust prices. While the solution method commonly adopted by this literature, the log-linearization, delivers a perfectly symmetric response, methods that respect the original struc- ture of the model yield an asymmetric one. We show that when products are good substitutes to each other and labour supply is inelastic, the mo...
In many markets, empirical evidence suggests that positive production cost shocks are transmitted mo...
In many markets, empirical evidence suggests that positive production cost shocks are transmitted mo...
We construct a quantitative equilibrium model with firms setting prices in a staggered fashion and u...
We present a simple menu cost model which explains the finding that firms are more likely to adjust ...
We present a simple menu cost model which explains the finding that firms are more likely to adjust ...
Though built with increasingly precise microfoundations, modern optimizing sticky price models have ...
Two dynamic sticky price models with monopolistic competition in the goods market are presented. In ...
Two dynamic sticky price models with monopolistic competition in the goods market are presented. In ...
Two dynamic sticky price models with monopolistic competition in the goods market are presented. In ...
The question of the main determinants of persistent responses due to nominal shocks captures, at lea...
Abstract: This note investigates the interaction between nominal and real labour market rigidities. ...
Price rigidity is the key mechanism for propagating business cycles in traditional Keynesian theory....
The question of the main determinants of persistent responses due to nominal shocks captures, at lea...
The question of the main determinants of persistent responses due to nominal shocks captures, at lea...
The question of the main determinants of persistent responses due to nominal shocks captures, at lea...
In many markets, empirical evidence suggests that positive production cost shocks are transmitted mo...
In many markets, empirical evidence suggests that positive production cost shocks are transmitted mo...
We construct a quantitative equilibrium model with firms setting prices in a staggered fashion and u...
We present a simple menu cost model which explains the finding that firms are more likely to adjust ...
We present a simple menu cost model which explains the finding that firms are more likely to adjust ...
Though built with increasingly precise microfoundations, modern optimizing sticky price models have ...
Two dynamic sticky price models with monopolistic competition in the goods market are presented. In ...
Two dynamic sticky price models with monopolistic competition in the goods market are presented. In ...
Two dynamic sticky price models with monopolistic competition in the goods market are presented. In ...
The question of the main determinants of persistent responses due to nominal shocks captures, at lea...
Abstract: This note investigates the interaction between nominal and real labour market rigidities. ...
Price rigidity is the key mechanism for propagating business cycles in traditional Keynesian theory....
The question of the main determinants of persistent responses due to nominal shocks captures, at lea...
The question of the main determinants of persistent responses due to nominal shocks captures, at lea...
The question of the main determinants of persistent responses due to nominal shocks captures, at lea...
In many markets, empirical evidence suggests that positive production cost shocks are transmitted mo...
In many markets, empirical evidence suggests that positive production cost shocks are transmitted mo...
We construct a quantitative equilibrium model with firms setting prices in a staggered fashion and u...