A 2-Equation Model of the North Atlantic Economies, a Dynamic Panel Study

Carlin and Soskice (2005) advocate a 3-equation model of stabilization policy to replace the conventional IS-LM-AS model. One of their new equations is a monetary reaction rule MR derived by assuming that governments have performance objectives, but are constrained by an augmented Phillips curve PC....

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Main Author: David Kiefer
Format: Report
Language:unknown
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Online Access:http://economics.utah.edu/research/publications/2010_06.pdf
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:uta:papers:2010_06 2023-05-15T17:30:24+02:00 A 2-Equation Model of the North Atlantic Economies, a Dynamic Panel Study David Kiefer http://economics.utah.edu/research/publications/2010_06.pdf unknown http://economics.utah.edu/research/publications/2010_06.pdf preprint ftrepec 2020-12-04T13:43:34Z Carlin and Soskice (2005) advocate a 3-equation model of stabilization policy to replace the conventional IS-LM-AS model. One of their new equations is a monetary reaction rule MR derived by assuming that governments have performance objectives, but are constrained by an augmented Phillips curve PC. They label their replacement model the IS-PC-MR. Central banks achieve the PC-MR solution by setting interest rates along an IS curve. Observing that governments have more tools than just the interest rate, we simplify their model to 2 equations. We develop a state space econometric specification as the solution of these equations, adding a random walk model of the unobserved potential growth. Applying this method to a panel of North Atlantic countries, we find it historically consistent with a few qualifications. For one, governments are more likely to target growth rates, than output gaps. And, inflation expectations are more likely backward looking, than rational, but a two-step estimation based on a forward-looking sticky-price model dramatically improves the empirical fit. Significant interdependence can be seen in the between-country covariance of inflation and growth shocks. new Keynesian, Kalman filtering, open economies Report North Atlantic RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
institution Open Polar
collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
op_collection_id ftrepec
language unknown
description Carlin and Soskice (2005) advocate a 3-equation model of stabilization policy to replace the conventional IS-LM-AS model. One of their new equations is a monetary reaction rule MR derived by assuming that governments have performance objectives, but are constrained by an augmented Phillips curve PC. They label their replacement model the IS-PC-MR. Central banks achieve the PC-MR solution by setting interest rates along an IS curve. Observing that governments have more tools than just the interest rate, we simplify their model to 2 equations. We develop a state space econometric specification as the solution of these equations, adding a random walk model of the unobserved potential growth. Applying this method to a panel of North Atlantic countries, we find it historically consistent with a few qualifications. For one, governments are more likely to target growth rates, than output gaps. And, inflation expectations are more likely backward looking, than rational, but a two-step estimation based on a forward-looking sticky-price model dramatically improves the empirical fit. Significant interdependence can be seen in the between-country covariance of inflation and growth shocks. new Keynesian, Kalman filtering, open economies
format Report
author David Kiefer
spellingShingle David Kiefer
A 2-Equation Model of the North Atlantic Economies, a Dynamic Panel Study
author_facet David Kiefer
author_sort David Kiefer
title A 2-Equation Model of the North Atlantic Economies, a Dynamic Panel Study
title_short A 2-Equation Model of the North Atlantic Economies, a Dynamic Panel Study
title_full A 2-Equation Model of the North Atlantic Economies, a Dynamic Panel Study
title_fullStr A 2-Equation Model of the North Atlantic Economies, a Dynamic Panel Study
title_full_unstemmed A 2-Equation Model of the North Atlantic Economies, a Dynamic Panel Study
title_sort 2-equation model of the north atlantic economies, a dynamic panel study
url http://economics.utah.edu/research/publications/2010_06.pdf
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation http://economics.utah.edu/research/publications/2010_06.pdf
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