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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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) |
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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 |
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North Atlantic |
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North Atlantic |
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http://economics.utah.edu/research/publications/2010_06.pdf |
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