Title: Taking the theory to the data: A proposal
1Taking the theory to the dataA proposal
Romer Advanced Macroeconomics, Chapter
9 Inflation and Monetary Policy
Specific to General versus General to Specific
The role of ceteris paribus in a theory model
versus in an empirical model
2What causes inflation?
Many potential causes Shocks shifting the AD
curve to the right or the AS curve to the left
leads to higher prices
3Inflation and money growth
Equlilibrium in the money market
Inverting the equilibrium money relation
Endogenous, exogenous variables? Ceteris paribus
assumptions?
Deviations from long-run benchmark levels
4Deviations from a long-run money demand relation
Excess money measured as m-p-y-13(Rm-Rb)
5Examples of empirical questions
6Time dependence of macro data
Distinguish between
- Stationary variables with a short time
dependence, i.e. - a low degree of time persistence, transitory
effcts - Nonstationary variables with long time
dependence, i.e. - high degree of time persistence, permanent
effects.
7What is the long run?
Unit root as a local approximation of persistent
behavior !
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9Stationary and nonstationary movements in the data
- stationary movements have a short memory
(transitory components) - nonstationary movements have a long memory
(persistent components) - cointegration between nonstationary variables
eliminate the nonstationarity. A cointegration
relation can often be interpreted as a long-run
economic relation - distinguish between short-run and long-run
structures in the data
10How do we measure long-term movements in the
data?
- Deterministic trends (usually linear)
- Stochastic trends (persistent movements in the
data - A combination of the two
11A stochastic formulation
What is the meaning of a stochastic trend and a
stochastic long cycle?
12Illustrative example of how to measure a
stochastic trend
13Measuring a stochastic trend
14The stochastic trend in inflation
15- The increments of a deterministic trend are
constant over time - The increments of a stochastic trend are random
over time
- First and second order stochastic trends
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18Are prices I(1) or I(2)?
19The I(2) Scenario
- Defining autonomous shocks
- Theoretically
- Empirically
- Shocks shifting the AD curve
- Shocks shifting the AS curve
20Conditions for long-run price homogeneity
21Assuming price homogeneity
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24A theory consistent scenario
Inflation I(1) ?
25Why does nonstationarity matter for the
statistical modelling?
- Standard statistical inference is based on
stationarity. - Some new inferences is needed, but by
transforming the data into differences and
cointegration relations stationarity is
recovered. - Pulling and pushing forces
26Why does nonstationarity matter for the economic
modelling?
- Most economic models are developed for a
stationary world - The role of the ceteris paribus assumption
- The role of expectations
- Model based rational expectations
- Imperfect knowledge expectations
27I had the great good fortune in the 1960s to
initiate the professions work on plausible
microfoundations for macroeconomic modeling
taking into account the knowledge and the
information that the micro actors could
reasonably be supposed to have truly a
revolutionary movement. Unfortunately, the
rational expectations models appearing in the
1970s sidestepped the problem of expectations
formation under uncertainty by blithely supposing
that the models actors (tellingly dubbed
agents) knew the correct model and the
correct model was the analysts model whatever
that model might be that day. The stampede toward
rational expectations, referred to as a
revolution though it was only a generalization
of the neoclassical idea of equilibrium, derailed
the movement I initiated. In the end, this way of
modeling has not illuminated how the world
economy works. Happily for me and I believe for
the profession of economics, this book gives
signs of bringing us back on track on a road
toward an economics possessing a genuine
microfoundation and at the same time a capacity
to illuminate some of the many aspects of the
modern economy that the rational expectations
approach cannot by its nature explain.
28The I(1) scenario