“Understanding Real Business Cycles” by Charles I. Plosser Presented by: Lizzie Dies Wade Letter Adam Vande Zande.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Solow Growth Model (Part Three)
Advertisements

Aggregate demand and aggregate supply model A model that explains short-run fluctuations in real GDP and the price level.
A Real Intertemporal Model with Investment
Economic Growth and Dynamic Optimization - The Comeback - Rui Mota – Tel Ext April 2009.
Consumption & Saving Over Two Periods Consumption and Saving Effects of Changes in Income Effects of Interest Rates.
New Keynesian economics Modern macroeconomic modeling.
Neoclassical Growth Theory
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, 2005 Advanced Macroeconomics Chapter 16 CONSUMPTION, INCOME AND WEALTH.
Productivity, Output, and Employment
Abel, Bernanke and Croushore (chapters 9.4, 9.5 and 9.6)
Real Business Cycle Theory Graduate Macroeconomics I ECON 309 – Cunningham.
Intermediate Macroeconomics
Production, Growth And Business Cycles By Robert G. King, Charles I. Plosser and Sergio T. Rebelo Presented By Erik Grothman, John Hudson and Nate Drunasky.
A Real Intertemporal Model with Investment
Chapter 11 Classical Business Cycle Analysis: Market-Clearing Macroeconomics Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Inc.
© 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Principles of Macroeconomics 9e by Case, Fair and Oster 12 PART III THE CORE OF MACROECONOMIC.
Economic Growth: The Solow Model
Macroeconomics fifth edition N. Gregory Mankiw PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich macro © 2002 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved CHAPTER NINETEEN.
7. The Aggregate Supply Curve
Advanced Macroeconomics
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, 2005 CAPITAL ACCUMULATION AND GROWTH: THE BASIC SOLOW MODEL Chapter 3 – first lecture Introducing Advanced Macroeconomics:
Labor Markets Determining Output and Employment. Labor Market Statistics The labor market is a very dynamic market. This makes it difficult to characterize.
Economics 282 University of Alberta
Lecture 11: Consumption, Saving and Investment II L11200 Introduction to Macroeconomics 2009/10 Reading: Barro Ch.7 16 February 2010.
Economic Growth: Malthus and Solow
Classical Business Cycle Analysis: Market-Clearing Macroeconomics
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 3 Spending, Income, and Interest Rates.
Measurement of the Economy at the Macro Level. Outline of today’s discussion 1. Look at some data 2. Think about what the data tells us a. About the behavior.
The Theory of Aggregate Supply Chapter 4. 2 The Theory of Production Representative Agent Economy: all output is produced from labor and capital and in.
Final Review Closed book, closed note, you can bring calculator Focus more on the lectures after midterm Content: Everything We have learned so far Tue.
Chapter 7 learning objectives
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 6 Economic Growth: Malthus and Solow.
Economic Models Real economy is too complicated to understand
The Behavior of Interest Rates
Endogenous growth Sophia Kazinnik University of Houston Economics Department.
Optimal Consumption over Many Periods Facts About Consumption Consumption Under Certainty Permanent Income Hypothesis Uncertainty and Rational Expectations.
Growth Facts Solow Growth Model Optimal Growth Endogenous Growth
WEEK IX Economic Growth Model. W EEK IX Economic growth Improvement of standard of living of society due to increase in income therefore the society is.
Lecture 14 Malthusian Model.
Monetary Macroeconomic Modeling Setting the stage.
1 Lecture 8 The Keynesian Theory of Consumption Other Determinants of Consumption Planned Investment (I) The Determination of Equilibrium Output (Income)
1 Long-Run Economic Growth and Rising Living Standards Economic Growth.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 6 Economic Growth: Solow Model.
Macro Chapter 10 Dynamic Change, Economic Fluctuations, and the AD-AS Model.
CHAPTER 7 Economic Growth I slide 0 Econ 101: Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory Larry Hu Lecture 7: Introduction to Economic Growth.
Ecological Economics Lectures 04 and 05 22nd and 26th April 2010 Tiago Domingos Assistant Professor Environment and Energy Section Department of Mechanical.
Chapter 4 Consumer and Firm Behaviour: The Work-Leisure Decision and Profit Maximization Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education Canada.
Begin $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 Graphs Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3 Random Key Terms.
Macroeconomics Chapter 81 An Equilibrium Business-Cycle Model C h a p t e r 8.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 1.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 26 Long-Run Economic Growth.
Þ The Keynesians attribute business cycle fluctuations to what they regard as the fundamental instability of private spending--especially investment and.
Slide 1 Copyright © 2002 by O. Mikhail, Graphs are © by Pearson Education, Inc. A Real Intertemporal Model with Investment Chapter 7.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 9 A Real Intertemporal Model with Investment.
Chapter 5 A Closed-Economy One-Period Macroeconomic Model.
Test Review Econ 322 Test Review Test 1 Chapters 1,2,8,3,4,7.
Chapter 10 Lecture - Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand.
What Macroeconomics is about Structure and performance of national economies Policies that governments formulate and use to affect economic performance.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 3 Income and Interest Rates: The Keynesian Cross Model and the IS Curve.
INTRODUCTION ECON 702 ECON 702, Introduction 1. Fields of Economics Economics Microeconomics (study of individual consumers and markets) Industrial organization,
Chapter 15 Neoclassical Growth Theory. 2 Figure 15.1 ©2002 South-Western College Publishing Inputs and Outputs in the United States, 1929–1999.
Positive permanent Shock Positive Shock: Production function moves up. Know:y ↑ c ↑ Unsure:L:income effect ↓ Substitute effect = MP L ↓ Net effect =?
LECTURE NOTES ON MACROECONOMICS ECO306 SPRING 2014 GHASSAN DIBEH.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 6 Economic Growth: Solow Model.
Spending, Income, and Interest Rates
Chapter 6: Economic Growth
An Equilibrium Business-Cycle Model
Chapter 6: Economic Growth
C h a p t e r 8 An Equilibrium Business-Cycle Model
9. Fundamental Concepts of Macroeconomics
Presentation transcript:

“Understanding Real Business Cycles” by Charles I. Plosser Presented by: Lizzie Dies Wade Letter Adam Vande Zande

Key Questions Addressed Can current shocks have implications for future decisions and/or outcomes? What different factors does RBC look at compared to other methods? How close does the model get to actual data?

Main Points Focuses of Neoclassical vs. ISLM vs. Real Business Cycle Model can be accurate with some variables but off with others Difference – Real Business Cycles look at productivity shocks and other variables Neoclassical precursor for RBC

Outline of the Presentation Background Information Neoclassical Model Robinson Crusoe Productivity Disturbances Economic Growth & Business Cycles Real Business Cycles Model Data Productivity Shift Graphs Real Business Cycle Research

Background Information 1960s & 1970s Keynesian model vs. Business Cycles “Idealized state of dynamic equilibrium” Transform into more neoclassical

Neoclassical Model Most basic model of economic dynamics Benchmark model Simple economic environment to consider Households live forever Utility of each agent is function of consumption & leisure Maximize utility F(C,L) Labeled a “real business cycle model”

Robinson Crusoe Crusoe’s choice problem is to maximize his lifetime utility If there were no productivity disturbances… Model imposes resource constraints C + I ≤ Y L + N ≤ 1 C, L, N, K, I are all positive

Robinson Crusoe (cont.) First Order Conditions Linearize (approximations) Constant Parameters  α =.58; ᵦ =.95; ᵹ =.10

Productivity Disturbances Observes a temporarily high value of productivity… Consume more output in current period Also value future consumption and leisure Temporary vs. Permanent Temporary - substitution current for future work, and current consumption for leisure, wealth higher, higher output, consumption and leisure in the future Permanent - raise wealth, less incentive to increase investment, more incentive for current consumption, less incentive to work harder today Output and consumption are likely to be correlated Government actions?

Economic Growth & Business Cycles Neoclassical model of capital accumulation predicts that per capita values of output, capital and consumption will converge to constants. Solow – major factors Nelson and Plosser argue that real per capita output behaves as if they have random walk components. They also argue that Solow’s technology series behaves like a random walk. The fact that productivity grows over time raises additional complications

Productivity Shifts Need to obtain some measure of the productivity shocks. Figure 1 is the annual percentage rate of change in technology.

Real Business Cycles Simple neoclassical model described earlier is clearly an incomplete model of the U.S. Economy. Table 1 highlights some of the statistical properties of postwar business fluctuations.

Real Business Cycle Research Multi-Sector Extension Labor Markets Endogenous Growth Money Strategies

Conclusions Basic framework of RBC is the neoclassical model The model is accurate for some variables but not others Real technology shocks have occupied the central focus, but other shocks are being studied Real business cycle theory is still in its infancy Much work remains before economists have a full understanding of RBC