Title: Diapositive 1
1Theories and Methods of the Business Cycle. Part
1 Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium
Models III. Evaluating the RBC model Jean-Olivi
er HAIRAULT, Professeur à Paris I
Panthéon-Sorbonne et à lEcole dEconomie de
Paris (EEP)
2III. Evaluating the RBC model. 1. A controversial
approach
3II. Evaluating the RBC model. 1. A controversial
approach
4II. Evaluating the RBC model. 1. A controversial
approach
5II. Evaluating the RBC model. 2. The productivity
shock
6II. Evaluating the RBC model. 2.1 The problem of
volatility
7II. Evaluating the RBC model. 2.1 The problem of
volatility
- Make your own experiment sdepsilona.0012
- The variance of output is approximately divided
by 6 - Changes in the variance of the productivity shock
work to rescale the aggregate fluctuations. - But at this point nothing in the model explain
how to correct the measurement of the SR.
8II. Evaluating the RBC model. 2.2 The problem of
persistence
9II. Evaluating the RBC model. 2.2 The problem of
persistence
10II. Evaluating the RBC model. 2.2 The problem of
persistence
11II. Evaluating the RBC model. 2.2 The problem of
persistence
12II. Evaluating the RBC model. 2.2 The problem of
persistence
13II. Evaluating the RBC model. 2.2 The problem of
persistence
Hump-shaped Reponse of Output after a shock
14II. Evaluating the RBC model. 3. The problem of
labor supply elasticity
15II. Evaluating the RBC model. 3. The problem of
labor supply elasticity
16II. Evaluating the RBC model. 3. The problem of
labor supply elasticity
- Making your own experiment by lowering the value
of eta
17II. Evaluating the RBC model. 4. The problem of
the correlation between labor and wages
- Productivity shocks lead to a strong positive
correlation between labor and wages at odds with
facts (roughly zero in US, negative in European
countries). - Results
w
E
E
E
Ns, Nd
18III. Evaluating the RBC model. 5. RBC or DGSE
models?
- Two kinds of responses
- Some criticisms have been adressed in the RBC
theory, ie. Models where productivity shocks are
the main perturbation of optimal fluctuations. - Some criticisms have led to take into account
new-keynesian features as nominal and real
rigidities in DGSE models.