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NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES WAGES, RELATIVE PRICES AND CHOICE BETWEEN
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES WAGES, RELATIVE PRICES AND CHOICE BETWEEN

Fiscal Multiplier in a Liquidity Constrained New Keynesian Economy∗
Fiscal Multiplier in a Liquidity Constrained New Keynesian Economy∗

... for entrepreneurs. Each period, household members choose optimally among non-durable consumption, saving in bonds or equity and, if they are entrepreneurs, investment in capital. Details of their saving and investment options are as follows: (i) Investment in new capital. Entrepreneurs have the oppo ...
The Phillips Curve in the 1990s - Digital Commons @ IWU
The Phillips Curve in the 1990s - Digital Commons @ IWU

... such as serial correlation that may lead to biased estimates. In section six I will briefly conclude the paper. ...
PDF file
PDF file

... a much shorter and less stable economic history. The structural changes undergone by the Israeli economy, currently and in the past, as mentioned at the beginning of this paper, make it impossible to obtain a long and stable data set, and the relevance of the analysis of a long time series (which is ...
Combination of LSTM and CNN for recognizing mathematical symbols
Combination of LSTM and CNN for recognizing mathematical symbols

... 2 to 3 hours on NVIDIA Quadro K600 4GB GPU. ...
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES ENDOGENOUS ENTRY, PRODUCT VARIETY, AND BUSINESS CYCLES
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES ENDOGENOUS ENTRY, PRODUCT VARIETY, AND BUSINESS CYCLES

... growth model that abstracts from growth to focus on business cycles, our model can be viewed as a discrete-time, stochastic, general equilibrium version of variety-based, endogenous growth models (see e.g. Romer, 1990, and Grossman and Helpman, 1991) that abstracts from endogenous growth. This diffe ...
Capital Account Liberalisation and Foreign Direct Investmentin Nigeria
Capital Account Liberalisation and Foreign Direct Investmentin Nigeria

... on the solution of three main problems claimed to impede development. Firstly, the problem of an over-extended public sectors; secondly, the problem of an over-emphasis on physical capital formation, and finally, the proliferation of distorting economic controls (Toye, 1987, pp. 48-49). The pioneer ...
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES NEW-KEYNESIAN ECONOMICS: AN AS-AD VIEW Pierpaolo Benigno
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES NEW-KEYNESIAN ECONOMICS: AN AS-AD VIEW Pierpaolo Benigno

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DRAFT September 8, 2010

... The current account balance is the sum of the trade balance, remittance inflows, and the interest payments/receipts associated with the country’s international investment position. The latter is the product of the nominal interest rate on external debt/assets (given by the rate of time preference pl ...
Output, Business Cycles, and Employment
Output, Business Cycles, and Employment

... In the short run, changes in output cause changes in the employment of labour and in the use of plant and equipment, but these changes are not sustainable over longer time periods. Furthermore, because supplies of factor inputs and technology are fixed, there is no growth in real GDP. We leave that ...
the impact of real exchange rate volatility on
the impact of real exchange rate volatility on

... trade which consequently hampers economic growth. Changes have occurred in foreign exchange market as exhibited by strong appreciation of Kenyan Shilling between 2004 and 2007 of value 30.0% which is a major deviation from its past levels. Therefore, the relationship between exchange rate volatility ...
When is the Government Spending Multiplier Large?
When is the Government Spending Multiplier Large?

... A classic question in macroeconomics is: what is the size of the government spending multiplier? There are very large empirical and theoretical literatures that grapple with this question. In the empirical literature authors such as Barro (1981) argue that the multiplier is around 0.8 while authors ...
Chapter 1 - IDEAS/RePEc
Chapter 1 - IDEAS/RePEc

... Chapter 2 explores the different measures of macroeconomic data ranging from Gross National Product to unemployment. Beginning with the National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA), three approaches to measuring Gross Domestic Product measures are discussed. The first, the product approach (also know ...
The Depressing Effect of Agricultural Institutions on the Prewar
The Depressing Effect of Agricultural Institutions on the Prewar

... barrier is superimposed on it, can account for the relative stagnation of prewar Japan. We then lift the labor barrier to predict what would have happened to the prewar Japanese economy. This counterfactual simulation shows that prewar GNP per worker would have been higher by about 32 percent, which ...
Is Numérairology the Future of Monetary Economics?
Is Numérairology the Future of Monetary Economics?

... for setting negative nominal interest rates. The modalities for setting negative nominal interest rates in turn highlight the importance of the extent to which the numéraire function can be unbundled from the means of payment/medium of exchange function. It goes without saying that for something to ...
Quantitative Easing in Joseph`s Egypt with Keynesian Producers
Quantitative Easing in Joseph`s Egypt with Keynesian Producers

... goods that impact neither the marginal utility of private consumption nor production possibilities. Eggertsson (2011) and Christiano, Eichenbaum, and Rebelo (2011) argue that the multiplier effects of such government spending are large in liquidity traps caused by shocks to desired savings, because ...
Interest Rate and the Exchange Rate: A Non
Interest Rate and the Exchange Rate: A Non

... spending. This tends to increase the market interest rate, thus raising the opportunity cost of holding money and depreciating the currency. In a similar vein, for a given level of deposits, the fall in bank credit associated with the output e¤ect implies that banks will lend more to the government. ...
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Sticky Price Models, Durable Goods, and Real Wage
Sticky Price Models, Durable Goods, and Real Wage

... Using the standard two sector New Keynesian model, Barsky, House, and Kimball (BHK) (2007) eloquently demonstrate that the degree of price flexibility in the durable goods sector dictates the response of aggregate output to a monetary shock. When nondurablegoods’ prices are sticky but durable-goods’ ...
Principles of Economic Growth
Principles of Economic Growth

... conduct of some, than had been taken from it either by the private misconduct of others, or by the ...
University of Lethbridge — Department of Economics
University of Lethbridge — Department of Economics

... A) sells government bonds, decreasing bank reserves, increasing lending, increasing the overnight rate. B) sells government bonds, decreasing bank reserves, decreasing lending, decreasing the overnight rate. C) buys government bonds, increasing bank reserves, increasing lending, decreasing the overn ...
RQ_ANS
RQ_ANS

Introductory Macroeconomics - General Guide To Personal and
Introductory Macroeconomics - General Guide To Personal and

... At its core, macroeconomic theory is about three key markets: the goods market, the money market and the labour market1 . We usually lump all consumer goods together into a single good, which can be thought of as a “bundle” containing appropriate proportions of all the goods needed to survive in an ...
Endogenous Technical Change in Alternative Theories
Endogenous Technical Change in Alternative Theories

... exogenous. In fact, under the assumption of perfectly competitive goods and factor markets as well as marginal productivity pricing of capital and labor, neoclassical growth requires technical change to be generated outside the model: because the aggregate production function is linearly homogeneous ...
The Law of Diminishing Elasticity of Demand in - Gredeg
The Law of Diminishing Elasticity of Demand in - Gredeg

... low. 6 Harrod conceded that the only tendency towards diminishing returns, accounting for some part of the changes in prices, might result from the employment of progressively inferior quality labour, and growing carelessness on the part of management: “in the normal cycle the human factor is much m ...
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Okishio's theorem

Okishio's theorem is a theorem formulated by Japanese economist Nobuo Okishio. It has had a major impact on debates about Marx's theory of value. Intuitively, it can be understood as saying that if one capitalist raises his profits by introducing a new technique that cuts his costs, the collective or general rate of profit in society – for all capitalists – goes up.Okishio [1961] establishes this theorem under the assumption that the real wage – the price of the commodity basket which workers consume – remains constant. Thus, the theorem isolates the effect of 'pure' innovation from any consequent changes in the wage.For this reason the theorem, first proposed in 1961, excited great interest and controversy because, according to Okishio, it contradicts Marx's law of the tendency of the rate of profit to fall. Marx had claimed that the new general rate of profit, after a new technique has spread throughout the branch where it has been introduced, would be lower than before. In modern words, the capitalists would be caught in a rationality trap or prisoner's dilemma: that which is rational from the point of view of a single capitalist, turns out to be irrational for the system as a whole, for the collective of all capitalists. This result was widely understood, including by Marx himself, as establishing that capitalism contained inherent limits to its own success. Okishio's theorem was therefore received in the West as establishing that Marx's proof of this fundamental result was inconsistent.More precisely, the theorem says that the general rate of profit in the economy as a whole will be higher if a new technique of production is introduced in which, at the prices prevailing at the time that the change is introduced, the unit cost of output in one industry is less than the pre-change unit cost. The theorem, as Okishio (1961:88) points out, does not apply to non-basic branches of industry.The proof of the theorem may be most easily understood as an application of the Perron–Frobenius theorem. This latter theorem comes from a branch of linear algebra known as the theory of nonnegative matrices. A good source text for the basic theory is Seneta (1973). The statement of Okishio's theorem, and the controversies surrounding it, may however be understood intuitively without reference to, or in-depth knowledge of, the Perron–Frobenius theorem or the general theory of nonnegative matrices.
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