Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

DSGE Modelling at Central Banks: Country Practices and How it is Used in Policy Making Haris Munandar Bank Indonesia SEACEN-CCBS/BOE-BSP Workshop on DSGE.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "DSGE Modelling at Central Banks: Country Practices and How it is Used in Policy Making Haris Munandar Bank Indonesia SEACEN-CCBS/BOE-BSP Workshop on DSGE."— Presentation transcript:

1 DSGE Modelling at Central Banks: Country Practices and How it is Used in Policy Making Haris Munandar Bank Indonesia SEACEN-CCBS/BOE-BSP Workshop on DSGE Modelling and Econometric Techniques Manila, 27 November 2009

2 1 BISMA: Bank Indonesia Structural MAcro model Implementation of a full-fledged Inflation Targeting Framework (ITF) on July 2005 necessitates support by a model with the following features:  capturing supply and demand side very well  more resistant to Lucas critique  incorporating rational expectation explicitly through optimization behaviour of economic agents  incorporating forward-looking endogenous interest rate reaction  ability to be utilized in policy simulation and forecasting

3 Role of economic models in Bank Indonesia 2

4 Outline Specification and model structure Behaviour of agents Market clearing conditions and identities Data and methodology Estimation, calibration and IRF Forecasting and simulation results 3

5 4 Micro-founded Macroeconomic model (DSGE). New Keynesian – Neoclassical Synthesis:  Long run neoclassical steady state (neutrality of money)  Short-run Keynesian dynamics  Rational expectation Nominal rigidities : price and wage staggered contract ala Rotemberg Real rigidities : habit formation in consumption, and adjustment cost in capital Interest rate reaction function (Taylor Rule) secara endogen dan forward looking sejalan dengan penerapan ITF Two core economic agents (households and firms) and 3 auxiliary economic agents (central bank, government and foreign/rest of the world), Specification

6 5 Model structure

7 Outline Specification and model structure Behaviour of agents Market clearing conditions and identities Data and methodology Estimation, calibration and IRF Forecasting and simulation results 6

8 7 Household  Own assets (domestic and foreign bond); purchase finished goods and investment goods; receive wages as return for labor supplied to firms; receive rental capital from firms; and receive profits from firm  Objective Function :  Budget Constraints:

9 8 Household Investment increase the capital stock over time according to Capital Accumulation eq : Wage Setting  The labor aggregator solve: where is the flexible-price optimal nominal wage and are in logs

10 9 Household: log-linear solution Consumption Flexible Wage Investment where Shadow Price of Capital

11 10 Household: log-linear solution Capital Supply Uncovered Interest Parity Wage Inflation where

12 11 Assumption : Monopolistically competitive firms with Cobb-Douglas Production Function : Profits Price Setting The price aggregator solve: where is the flexible-price and are in logarithmic Flexible price Domestic Intermediate Firm

13 12 Domestic intermediate firm: log-linear solution Output Labor demand Capital demand PPI inflation where

14 13 Consumption goods producer Profit Price setting The price aggregator solve: where is the flexible-price and are in log Flexible - consumption goods producer’s price: Consumption goods producer

15 14 Cons. goods producer: log-linear solution Consumption goods Domestic consumption intermediate demand Imported consumption intermediate demand CPI inflation where

16 15 Assumption Producing investment goods from imported materials Investment Goods Producer Profit Investment goods producer

17 16 Invest. goods producer: log-linear solution Investment goods Investment goods price

18 17 Assumption Producing government goods from domestic materials Government goods producer Profit Government goods producer Government goods producer: log-linear solution Government goods

19 18 Export goods producer Profit Price Setting The price aggregator solve: where is the flexible-price and are in log Flexible - export goods producer’s price: Export goods producer

20 19 Export goods producer: log-linear solution Export goods Domestic export intermediate demand Imported export intermediate demand Export price inflation where

21 20 Importers Provide imported materials as intermediate inputs to final good production Only act like merchants – no production function The price aggregator solve: where is the flexible-importer’s price and are in log Flexible - import’s price:

22 21 Importer: log-linear solution Imported Inflation where

23 22 Central bank Central bank objective function is to set the nominal short term interest rate i t in response to deviations of inflation from the target as well as output gap

24 23 Government Government fiscal authority  For simplification: government chooses the current government expenditure by smoothing previous government expenditure  However, it has to consider the source of financing from taxes, and bond issuance

25 24 Balance of payment Balance of Payment Balance of payment equation is the result of interactions among all agents, which has connection with foreign sectors

26 Outline Specification and model structure Behaviour of agents Market clearing conditions and identities Data and methodology Estimation, calibration and IRF Forecasting and simulation results 25

27 26 Export: Import: Dom. Intermediate Goods : Nominal GDP: Market clearing conditions and identities

28 27 Market clearing conditions and identities Risk Premium : Foreign Economy : Technology Growth

29 Outline Specification and model structure Behaviour of agents Market clearing conditions and identities Data and methodology Estimation, calibration and IRF Forecasting and simulation results 28

30 29 Data and methodologi Data  Kuartalan : 2000 Q1 – 2009 Q2 Solving Rational Expectation  Generalized Schur Decomposition (Klein, 2000) Estimation  Bayesian Robustness Check  Impulse Response Function (IRF)

31 Outline Specification and model structure Behaviour of agents Market clearing conditions and identities Data and methodology Estimation, calibration and IRF Forecasting and simulation results 30

32 Parameter estimation 31

33 Parameter calibration 32

34 IRF – unfavorable inflation shock 33

35 IRF – exchange rate depreciation shock 34

36 IRF – favorable foreign demand shock 35

37 IRF – tight policy 36

38 Outline Specification and model structure Behaviour of agents Market clearing conditions and identities Data and methodology Estimation, calibration and IRF Forecasting and simulation results 37

39 Simulation result: loose policy vs. baseline 38

40 Simulation result: loose policy vs. baseline 39

41 Simulation result: tight policy vs. baseline 40

42 Simulation result: tight policy vs. baseline 41

43 42 THANK YOU


Download ppt "DSGE Modelling at Central Banks: Country Practices and How it is Used in Policy Making Haris Munandar Bank Indonesia SEACEN-CCBS/BOE-BSP Workshop on DSGE."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google