Title: Investment in Business Cycle Models
1Investment in Business Cycle Models
2The Power of Investment in Business Cycle Models
- The technology-induced fluctuations in standard
Real Business Cycle models are fundamentally
investment booms. - Kimball and Ramnath With Realistic Parameters
the Basic Real Business Cycle model Acts Like the
Solow Growth Model - Basu, Fernald, Fisher and Kimball
Sector-Specific Technology Shocks - Including investment dramatically changes the
behavior of sticky-price models. - Barsky, House, and Kimball Durable Goods and
Sticky-Price Models - III. The Neomonetarist Synthesis (Kimball)
- IV. A catastrophic collapse of investment was a
key propagation mechanism for the Great
Depression. (Barsky and Kimball)
3With Realistic Parameters the Basic Real
Business Cycle Model Acts Like the Solow Growth
Model
- To match the lack of strong long-run trend in
labor hours, Real Business Cycle models need
King-Plosser-Rebelo preferences, engineered to
get WCv(N), or equivalently, Nv-1(W/C). - Technology shocks are permanent.
- --A priori argument Useful knowledge not soon
forgotten - --Direct evidence from Are Technology
Improvements Contractionary? by Basu, Fernald
and Kimball - The elasticity of intertemporal substitution is
low. - --Consumption Euler equation evidence (Hall)
- --Hypothetical choice evidence (Kimball, Sahm and
Shapiro)
4With Realistic Parameters the Basic Real
Business Cycle Model Acts Like the Solow Growth
Model
- Given King-Plosser-Rebelo preferences with an
elasticity of intertemporal substitution of about
0.3, permanent technology shocks have essentially
no effect on I/Y or N. - These two results are linked. Multiply Cv(N)W
by N/C - Nv(N) WN/C (WN/Y) / (C/Y)
(1-a) / (C/Y). - 1-a is labors share. Given Cobb-Douglas, N
depends only on C/Y (negatively). Note that C/Y
1-(I/Y)-(G/Y). - Thus, N will increase only if I/Y or G/Y
increases if a tech shock does not induce an
investment boom, it does not raise labor hours. - Instead, output and investment go up by the same
percentage due to the direct effect of the
technology shock, and capital accumulates. (Same
as the response of Solow Growth Model to a perm.
tech shock)
5Sector-Specific Technical Change
- Susanto Basu
- Boston College and NBER
- Jonas Fisher
- Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
John Fernald Federal Reserve Bank of San
Francisco Miles Kimball University of Michigan
and NBER
Very preliminary
6Where does growth originate?
- Technical change differs across industries
- Recent work has highlighted that the final-use
sector in which technical change occurs matters - Greenwood, Hercowitz, Krusell
- Use relative price data
- We reconsider the evidence
- Extending GHK to situations where relative
pricesmight not measure technology correctly - Top down versus bottom up
7Outline
- Motivation Consumption-technology neutrality
- How to think about terms of trade?
- Disaggregating Manipulating the input-output
matrix - Comparing bottom-up versus top-down estimates
8Consumption Technology Neutrality
- Suppose utility is logarithmic
- Suppose there is some multiplicative technology A
for producing non-durable consumption goods - The stochastic process for consumption-technology
A affects only the production of nondurable
consumption goods - It does not affect affect labor hours N,
investment I, or an index of the resources
devoted to producing consumption goods X.
9Consider social-planners problem for two-sector
growth model, with CRS, identical production
technologies
10This is Special Case of Following, Simple Social
Planners Problem
Equivalent problem
11Comments
- Because ln(A) is an additively-separable term,
any stochastic process for A has no effect on the
optimal decision rules for N, X and I. - There is a weaker, but still important result for
the more general King-Plosser-Rebelo case - anticipated movements in A act like changes in
the utility discount rate - unanticipated movements in A have no effect on
the optimal decision rules for N, X and I.
12King-Plosser-Rebelo Utility with EIS lt 1 (?gt1)
Equivalent problem
13An Example Mean-Reverting Consumption
Technology
- If A follows an AR(1) process, then At /A0 lt 1
after an increase in A above the steady-state
level at time zero. - This makes (At /A0)1-? gt 1, which has the same
effect as if the discount factor ß were larger. - Higher ß (greater patience) would lead to an
increase in investment I, an increase in labor
hours N, and a reduction in the resources devoted
to consumption X. - Thus, At /A0 lt 1 leads to an increase in
investment I, an increase in labor hours N, and a
reduction in the resources devoted to consumption
X. - However, CAX may increase even though X
decreases.
14Empirical Implications Standard RBC Parameters
- With the standard parametrizations of the utility
function consumption technology shocks will have
very different effects from investment technology
shocks. - consumption technology shocks have no effect on
labor hours or investment. - investment technology shocks have the same effect
on labor hours and investment as pervasive
technology shocks. - therefore, like pervasive technology shocks in
standard RBC models, investment technology shocks
should have a large effect on labor hours and
investment.
15Empirical Implications Low EIS and Permanent
Tech Shocks
- With permanent technology shocks and
King-Plosser-Rebelo utility and relatively low
elasticity of intertemporal substitution ( 0.3),
investment technology shocks also have very
little immediate effects on labor hours, though
they do raise investment in a way that
consumption technology shocks do not.
16A More General Question
- Example of consumption technology neutrality
raises possibility that shocks to different final
sectors have different effects on aggregate labor
hours and investment. - Therefore, we would like to construct technology
shocks for goods of different levels of
durability to see empirically if these have
different effects.
17Motivation A novel test of price stickiness
- In the log case, a change in consumption
technology should have no effect on investment
and hours - For plausible deviations from log utility of
consumption and permanent technology shocks
(EISlt1and AR(1) technology as analyzed above),
improvements in consumption technology should
raise investment - But with sticky prices, Basu-Kimball (2001) show
that improved consumption technology should lower
investment and hours in the short run - Reason is that with price stickiness, relative
price of consumption cannot jump down on impact - However, consumption technology should have
RBC-style effect once effective price stickiness
ends
18Terms of Trade as Technology
- In a closed economy, relative prices are always
driven by domestic factors, including domestic
technology - But this is not true with an open economythe
relative price faced by a small open economy can
change due to changes in foreign technology or
demand - We classify such price changes as technology
shocks because they enable home consumers to
have more consumption with unchanged labor input - View trade as a special (linear) technology, with
terms of trade changes as technology shocks - However, this type of technology is specialfor
one thing, it has very different trend growth
19Terms of Trade as Technology, contd
- Thus, need to allow ToT to follow a different
stochastic process than more conventional
technical change - Ultimately a definitional questionShould
technology represent a change in the
possibility frontier for consumption and leisure,
or be restricted to a change in the production
functions for domestic C and I? - We use the first, broader, definition. Labeling
does not matter, so long as one takes into
account both ToT changes and domestic PF shifts
20Issues in using industry/commodity data to
measure sectoral technical change
- Final use is by commodity, productivity data are
by industry - I-O make table maps commodity production to
industries - Can translate industry technology into final-use
technology, using - dzCommodity M-1dzIndustry,
- where dzIndustry is vector of industry
technologies - Industry/commodity TFP is in terms of domestic
production, whereas final-use reflects total
commodity supply - Domestic commodity production plus commodity
imports - I-O use table tells us both production and
imports - Requires rescaling domestic-commodity technology
21Rearranging the standard input-output table
22Defining final-use technology
23Notes
- Trade technology is the terms of trade
- Suppose there are no intermediate-inputs and one
of each final-use commodity (e.g., a single
consumption good) - Final-use technology is technology in that
commodity - Otherwise, takes account of intermediate-input
flows
24The Power of Investment in Business Cycle Models
- The technology-induced fluctuations in standard
Real Business Cycle models are fundamentally
investment booms. - Kimball and Ramnath With Realistic Parameters
the Basic Real Business Cycle model Acts Like the
Solow Growth Model - Basu, Fernald, Fisher and Kimball
Sector-Specific Technology Shocks - Including investment dramatically changes the
behavior of sticky-price models. - Barsky, House, and Kimball Durable Goods and
Sticky-Price Models - III. The Neomonetarist Synthesis (Kimball)
- IV. A catastrophic collapse of investment was a
key propagation mechanism for the Great
Depression. (Barsky and Kimball)
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27There Must Be Sticky Prices for Durables to Get
This Kind of Behavior
- We show that if a durable goods have flexible
prices, a monetary contraction will raise the
output of that durable. - Durability, not final use is the key feature for
this point, business investment, housing
investment and other long-lived durable purchases
are similar.
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36The Marginal Value of a Durable is Largely
Invariant to Shocks with Temporary Real Effects
1. Stocks of durables will change slowly because
of a high stock/flow ratio 1/d. 2. Only the
first few terms in this series will be affected.
37 The Neutrality Problem
Nd Wt/PjtMRPNf(Nt)/µj
Consider a durable good with flexible prices
Ns
Labor Market Equilibrium v(Nt) (?jt/µj)f(Nt)
(?j/µj)f(Nt)
38The Comovement Problem
v(Nt) (?j/µj)fj(Njt)
39The Quantity of Nondurables Is Slaved to the
Relative Price
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41The Power of Durables
42The Power of Investment in Business Cycle Models
- The technology-induced fluctuations in standard
Real Business Cycle models are fundamentally
investment booms. - Kimball and Ramnath With Realistic Parameters
the Basic Real Business Cycle model Acts Like the
Solow Growth Model - Basu, Fernald, Fisher and Kimball
Sector-Specific Technology Shocks - Including investment dramatically changes the
behavior of sticky-price models. - Barsky, House, and Kimball Durable Goods and
Sticky-Price Models - III. The Neomonetarist Synthesis Adding a
Non-Zero Interest Elasticity of Money Demand to
the Basic Neomonetarist Model (Kimball) - IV. A catastrophic collapse of investment was a
key propagation mechanism for the Great
Depression. (Barsky and Kimball)
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44LM Curve Case
Note--Opposite Slope for a Wicksellian Rule
rby y bp p bx(x-p), where x is
the price target.
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46Real Rigidity and the Dynamics of Inflation
47The Dynamics of Inflation (?Calvo Parameter)
dp/dt - ?2 ß(y-yf)
Compare to pt pet1 ?(?r)ß(y-yf)
48dp/dt - ?2 ß(y-yf)
(?Calvo Parameter)
49Investment is the Key to the Determination of y
50Cost Minimization?RK/WNa/(1-a) Thus R-d
a/(1-a) (WN/K) d Neoclassical labor
supply? WN/K Ws(N(Y,K,Z),?) N(Y,K,Z)/K where ?
is the marginal value of wealth
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52dp/dt - ?2 ß(y-yf)
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54LM Curve Case
Notedp/dt has opposite slope for Wicksellian
rule rby y bp p bx(x-p). Saddle path has
same slope.
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58A Positive Labor Supply Shock
59R-d a/(1-a) (Ws(N)N/K) d
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61LM shifts back, then gradually out, going beyond
its initial position. If dp/dt slopes the other
way because of a Wicksellian rule instead of an
LM curve, the monetary policy rule will jump out,
then gradually shift out further.
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63A Technology Shock
64Catastrophic Collapse of Investment and the Great
Depression
- Robert Barsky
- Miles Kimball
- University of Michigan and NBER
Very preliminary discussion prepared for seminar
at Michigan, April 11, 2007. Please do not
circulate.
65Executive Summary Model
- Study Great Depression in standard New Keynesian
sticky price model with capital - Provides interesting synthesis of
- Consensus monetary view of Depression emanating
from Friedman and Schwartz - with
- Earlier arch-Keynesian real theories based on
collapse of investment, building cycles, floors
and ceilings, self-fulfilling prophecies, etc. - Has elements of the nonlinear, catastrophe-theoret
ic development of the latter by Hicks, Kaldor,
Goodwin, Kalecki, Varian, etc. but - Money remains the driving variable
- Model is modern, recognizable, and totally
standard
66Executive Summary, cont. Empirical Facts
- Gross Investment really did collapse essentially
to zero - Sharp drop in wage bill
- Indicates sharp decline in rental rates on
capital - Strongly deflationary environment with very high
real interest rates until 1933 - Then sharp turn towards inflation, low real rates
- Rental rates and investment didnt show strong
recovery until at least 1935
67Bottom Line Explanation of Depression and
Recovery
- Very high real rates confronted low rental rates
on capital - Former due to tight money and deflation
- Latter due both to low output and possibly high
inherited capital stock - This lead to complete investment collapse,
apparently hitting between 1931 and 1932 - Turn toward inflation in 1933 plus depreciation
of capital eventually reignites investment, but
wasnt enough to do it quickly
68Elements
- NRR curve net rental rate on capital
- MP curve real interest rate as function of
output - Easiest case LM curve from constant elasticity
money demand function - Phase diagram to endogenize inflation
69When and Why Did Investment Leave Great
Depression Models?
- Friedman and Schwartz
- Persuasive
- Highly aggregative no discussion of components
of GNP - Emphasis on why money stock collapsed, not how it
caused fall in output - Temin
- Pointed out drop of gross investment to near-zero
in 1932 but - Found autonomous fall in consumption, not
investment (dont confuse impulse with
propagation!) - Bernanke a partial exception
- But emphasis is on financing, not implications of
investment per se
70The Net Rental Rate
- Rental Market for Capital (no adjustment costs,
investment smoothing) - Rental rate R marginal cost product of
capital (sticky prices, demand-constrained
- rR-d
- NY1/?(1-a)K-a/(1-a)Z-1 (IRTS Cobb Douglas
production function) - RK/WNa/(1-a) (constant cost shares )
- WUN/UC W(N(Y,K,Z),?) (labor supply)
71r
The Net Rental Rate Curve
- Recall that both N and W are increasing in Y
- Low Y ? low of Investment
NRR
Note Curve would be steeper if elasticity of
substitution between K and L were less than unity
r0
Y
Here gross investment is zero (or at some fixed
minimum)
Ymin (IImin)
72Wage Bill
- Capital essentially fixed over short period
- Indicator of Net Rental Rate
73Gross Investment Collapse
Gross Investment Collapse
74Gross Investment Collapse Building Index and
Building Permits
75r
Multiple Short Run Equilibria
MP
Selection Criterion Stay put unless the
equilibrium you are at disappears
NRR
r0
pe
Y
Ynatural
Ymin (IImin)
76Depression Predisposing Factors From 1920s
- Low inflation or deflation (Makes MP curve high)
- Technology revolution
- Overbuilding? (Makes NRR curve low)
-liquidationist" viewpoint - Long expansionary period
- Easy money?
- Over-optimism about growth rates?
77r
Unexpected Monetary Contraction
MP
NRR
r0
p
Y
Ymin (IImin)
78r
Expected Deflation
MP
NRR
p
r0
Y
Ynatural
Ymin (IImin)
79Hysteresis A Monetary Restoration May Not
Restore the Original Equilibrium
r
MP
NRR
r0
p
Y
Ymin (IImin)
Ynatural
80Further, Modest Monetary or Fiscal Expansions
Provide No Escape
r
MP
Monetary Expansion Shifts MP Right or Down
Fiscal Expansion Shifts Ymin Right
NRR
r0
p
Y
Ymin (IImin)
81 An Escape by Monetary Policy Alone Can
Cause a Jump Above the Natural Level of Output
r
MP
NRR
r0
p
Y
Ynatural
Ymin (IImin)
82The Skillful Way Out Involves a Monetary
Restoration Plus a Fiscal Expansion
r
MP
NRR
r0
p
Y
Ynatural
YminCIminG
83Endogenizing Inflation The Phase Diagram in
the Neighborhood of the Steady State in the
Absence of an Investment Collapse
p
steady- state inflation
dx/dt 0
p0 (different positions possible)
dp/dt 0
x (real money balances)
84The Phase Diagram with Coexisting Blue (Normal)
and Red (Depression) Dynamics Shown
p
steady- state inflation
dx/dt 0
Reignition Boundary
p0 (different positions possible)
dp/dt 0
Collapse Boundary
x (real money balances)
85The Phase Diagram with Only the Blue (Normal)
and Red (Depression) Saddle Paths Shown
p
Assume log money follows random walk with
constant drift
steady- state inflation
dx/dt 0
Reignition Boundary
p0 (different positions possible)
dp/dt 0
Collapse Boundary
x (real money balances)
collapse values of x
86Lessons From Phase Diagram
- Nonlinearity
- Need sufficiently large monetary expansion to get
to the reignition boundary - Nothing happens to investment and output until
then - Hysteresis
- Dynamics depend on where you start from
- Probably need inflationary boom to reach
reignition region - Mundell and Keynes effects
- Keynes effect will restore full-employment in
long run - Low but rising inflation means Mundell will
eventually switch from harmful to helpful
87Using a Fiscal Expansion to Shift the Reignition
Boundary
p
- Moves boundary to left of of p-dot0 locus
- Avoids need for inflationary boom
steady- state inflation
dx/dt 0
p0 (different positions possible)
dp/dt 0
x (real money balances)
collapse values of x
Reignition Boundary
Collapse Boundary
88The Power of Investment in Business Cycle Models
- The technology-induced fluctuations in standard
Real Business Cycle models are fundamentally
investment booms. - Kimball and Ramnath With Realistic Parameters
the Basic Real Business Cycle model Acts Like the
Solow Growth Model - Basu, Fernald, Fisher and Kimball
Sector-Specific Technology Shocks - Including investment dramatically changes the
behavior of sticky-price models. - Barsky, House, and Kimball Durable Goods and
Sticky-Price Models - III. The Neomonetarist Synthesis (Kimball)
- IV. A catastrophic collapse of investment was a
key propagation mechanism for the Great
Depression. (Barsky and Kimball)