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Cross section distribution dynamicsLamo, Ana Rosa January 1996 (has links)
This thesis contains four chapters. Each chapter constitutes an empirical exercise in which I apply econometric ideas on studying the dynamics of large cross sections of data (Random Fields). Three of them concern the empirics of convergence and the fourth analyses business cycle fluctuations. The first, "Notes on Convergence Empirics: Some Calculations for Spanish Regions," describes the econometric methods for studying the dynamics of the distributions and how to characterise convergence in this framework, explains why the standard cross-section regression analysis is misleading when testing for convergence and then performs some calculations for regions in Spain. The second chapter, "Dynamics of the Income Distribution Across OECD Countries", considers its baseline hypotheses to be those generated by the Solow growth model. Using sequential conditioning, it studies whether the convergence hypothesis implications can be shown to hold for the OECD economies. It finds that neither absolute nor conditional convergence, in the sense of economies approaching the OECD average, has taken place. The third chapter, "Cross Sectional Firm Dynamics: Theory and Empirical Results", extends ideas of distribution dynamics to a discrete choice setting, and extends the reasoning of Galton's Fallacy to the logit model. It provides evidence of the tendency of firm sizes to converge for the US chemicals sector by analysing dynamically evolving cross-section distributions. Finally, the fourth chapter, "Unemployment in Europe and Regional Labour Fluctuations" applies distribution dynamics ideas to a business cycle setting. It analyses the dynamics of employment for 51 European regions from 1960 to 1990, addressing the issue of whether regional shocks have aggregate effects on unemployment or the opposite. It uses a model for non-stationary evolving distributions to identify idiosyncratic and aggregate disturbances.
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Essays on business cycle fluctuations.Photphisutthiphong, Nopphawan January 2009 (has links)
This thesis consists of three essays on business cycle fluctuations that are based on the market-clearing dynamic general equilibrium framework. The first two essays examine the ultimate source of economic fluctuations in Thailand and Australia, respectively. The tool of study is the Business Cycle Accounting (BCA) method developed by Chari et al. (2002; 2007a). The third essay investigates the relation between capital-labour substitution and sectoral externalities in self-fulfilling expectation equilibria. It employs a two-sector competitive model proposed by Benhabib and Farmer (1996). The BCA method examines the transmission mechanisms of shocks within an economy. These transmission mechanisms are called wedges which are responsible for the deviation of aggregate variables from a competitive equilibrium. Four categories of wedges are defined in the BCA: 1) the efficiency wedge represents the input-financing frictions in production; 2) the labour wedge is the frictions between consumption leisure trade-off and marginal product of labour; 3) the investment wedge is the frictions between the intertemporal marginal rate of substitution in consumption and the marginal product of capital; and 4) the government consumption wedge indicates the frictions in international borrowing and lending. Chapter 2 applies the BCA method with deterministic wedges to examine the output variations in Thailand between 1971-2003. The efficiency wedge is found to be the most important driving force behind the output variations during episodes of boom and bust in Thailand over the studied period. In particular for the 1997 economic downturn, the evidence shows that the cost of credit intermediation for some firms was relatively high. This altered an acquisition of working capital and labour in these firms when compared to others, which likely caused inefficient reallocation of inputs across the economy. As such, the efficiency wedge appears to fall at aggregate level during the economic downturn. Chapter 3 applies the BCA method with stochastic wedges to examine the variations in output and investment in Australia. Although the efficiency wedge alone can account for these variations, it predicts much more volatility in output than the actual data. Upon allowing for the combination of efficiency and labour wedges, the model can replicate the amplitude of output variations better. The negative cross correlation between these two wedges suggests their interference. Chapter 4 examines the effect of capital-labour substitution on the existence of indeterminacy in two-sector models and check whether the corresponding returns to scale are still empirically plausible. The main finding is that a higher requirement of sectoral externalities for indeterminacy is needed when capital and labour are less substitutable. Intuitively, the low substitutability implies that capital and labour are complementary factors of production. This retards the mobility of factors between the consumption and investment sectors. In the belief driven equilibria, the consumers’ optimistic expectation on returns is fulfilled as long as the rate of returns is sufficiently high such that current consumption is given up for investment. The rate of returns hereby indicates sectoral externalities. In such a production environment, the minimum requirement of externalities for indeterminacy therefore becomes larger so that it can successfully break the tightly coupling factors within sector, and raises the production of investment goods effectively. As a result, the current relative price of investment goods falls. In the next period, consumers enjoy more consumption goods and the relative price of investment good rises. The ascending pricing sequence yields capital gains and the consumers’ belief is finally fulfilled. Based on the logarithmic utility in consumption and the elasticity of substitution of 0.5 as suggested in Klump et al. (2007) and Chirinko (2008), the minimum requirement of returns to scale for indeterminacy is 1.1236, and it still lies within the range in most empirical studies. / Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, School of Economics, 2009
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Sticky information and non-pricing policies in DSGE modelsMolinari, Benedetto 19 September 2008 (has links)
La tesis consta de dos partes. En la primera parte se analiza la relación entre las fricciones en los flujos de información que llegan a la empresa y la persistencia del patrón de la inflación. En particular, se presenta un nuevo estimador por el modelo de Makiw y Reis (2002) "Sticky Information Phillips Curve", y se aplica usando datos trimestrales de EE.UU. El resultado principal es que el modelo tan solo puede explicar la persistencia de la inflación asumiendo que la variancia de la inflación sea mucho mas grande de la que observamos o, equivalentemente, que el modelo no puede explicar conjuntamente la variancia y la persistencia de la inflación.En la segunda parte se presentan nuevas evidencias sobre la publicidad agregada en EE.UU. y se estudian los efectos de la publicidad en la economía usando un modelo dinámico estocástico de equilibrio general. En particular, el capitulo 2 se enfoca en las relaciones de corto plazo entre las mas comunes variables macroeconómicas - consumo agregado, producto interno bruto, totalidad de horas trabajadas en la economía - y la publicidad agregada, con particular atención a la relación de causalidad entre publicidad y consumo. En cambio, el capitulo 3 se enfoca sobre las relaciones de largo plazo, enseñando como la publicidad agregada afecte el nivel de trabajo de la economía. A través del modelo presentado en el capitulo 2, se demuestra que un mayor nivel de publicidad implica un mayor números de oras trabajadas asociadas con un menor nivel de bienestar por los consumidores. / This thesis is organized in two parts. In the first one, I seek to understand the relationship between frictions in information flows among firms and inflation persistence. To this end, I present a novel estimator for the Sticky Information Phillips Curve (Mankiw and Reis, 2002), and I use it to estimate this model with U.S. postwar data. The main result is that the Sticky Information Phillips Curve can match inflation persistence only at the cost of mispredicting inflation variance. I conclude that the Sticky Information Phillips Curve is a valid model to explain inflation persistence but not an overall valid theory of inflation. The second part presents new evidence about aggregate advertising expenditures in U.S., and analyzes the effect of advertising in the aggregate economy by the mean of a dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model. Chapter 2 focuses on the short run impact of advertising on the aggregate dynamics, and shows that an increase in aggregate advertising significantly increases the aggregate consumption. Chapter 3 focuses on the long run effects of advertising on the labor supply, showing that in economies where aggregate advertising is higher, agents supply more hours of works and are generally worse off in terms of welfare.
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Business cycle fluctuations and monetary policy in emerging economies / Fluctuations de cycle économique et politique monétaire dans les économies émergentesMrad, Houda 29 June 2018 (has links)
Dans cette thèse nous examinons différents aspects des fluctuations dans les économies émergentes. Premièrement, afin d’établir les régularités empiriques de ces pays nous examinons le contexte économique des pays du Moyen Orient et d’Afrique du Nord. Ensuite, nous estimons un modèle des cycles réels pour essayer de reproduire les faits stylisés de ces pays, mais aussi pour évaluer la performance de ces modèles néoclassiques augmentés de deux types de chocs de productivité transitoire et permanent. Ceci fait l’objet du chapitre 2 dont le résultat est en faveur de l'hypothèse "Le cycle c'est la tendance" . Le deuxième aspect porte sur l’importance des frictions financières, il est traité dans le troisième chapitre qui introduit des chocs financiers au modèle de croissance stochastique. Nous identifions le rôle des frictions financières dans l’économie tunisienne comme étant un amplificateur de l’effet des chocs de productivité. Le quatrième chapitre porte sur l'analyse de la politique monétaire. Premièrement, nous examinons le régime de ciblage d’inflation où nos résultats empiriques supportent une implémentation de la stricte version du ciblage d’inflation avec une fonction de réaction basée sur des prévisions de l'inflation. Deuxièmement, nous exploitant les règles monétaires optimales en présence de la rigidité d l'information dans le cadre d’un modèle stochastique d’équilibre général (DSGE). Nos résultats, révèlent que les chocs du taux de marge de la force de travail jouent un rôle important dans les fluctuations de l’économie tunisienne, la règle de Taylor produit un taux satisfaisant de bien être, alors que les règles qui ciblent le niveau de prix ne sont pas efficaces. / This thesis investigates different aspects of the fluctuations in emerging economies. First, it examines the MENA countries’ context to establish the empirical regularities. Then, to replicate the MENA countries’ business cycle patterns observed in the annual data, we estimate a standard real business cycle (RBC) model to assess the performance of the neoclassical model with transitory and permanent shocks. This is the purpose of chapter 2 which results support the assumption "The cycle is the trend". The second aspect refers to the importance of financial frictions and is addressed in the third chapter which adds new financial shocks to the stochastic growth model. We determine the role of financial frictions in the Tunisian economy not as the source of business cycle fluctuations but as an amplifier of the effects of total factor of productivity shocks.The fourth chapter analyzes monetary policy in emerging economies. Firstly, we examine the inflation targeting regime under the lens of a New Keynesian forward-looking model. We also, estimate a Taylor rule and some other alternatives in order to determine which rule to adopt within this framework. Empirical results support the implementation of a strict inflation targeting regime, with an inflation forecast based rule as a reaction function. Secondly, we explore the optimal monetary policy rules using a New Keynesian DSGE model. In particular we assume that information stickiness as the only type of rigidity in the model. We find that Whereas, Taylor rule in its original version provides substantial welfare gains, price-level targeting regime was suboptimal.
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Essays in the economics of health and wellbeingSchwandt, Hannes 19 June 2012 (has links)
The three chapters of this thesis investigate different aspects of the economics of health and wellbeing. The first chapter tests the rationality of life satisfaction forecasts. Contrary to the rational expectations hypothesis it shows that young people and those who are satisfied strongly overpredict future life satisfaction while the elderly and the unsatisfied strongly underpredict it. The second chapter is about how wealth shocks affect the health of retirees in the US. Results indicate strongly positive effects on physical health, mental health and mortality. The third chapter analyzes the effects of graduating in an unfavorable economic environment on graduates' subsequent income, health insurance and mortality. It finds that recession graduates have significantly lower incomes and worse health insurance coverage. And during the outbreak of the HIV/AIDS epidemic AIDS mortality has been significantly higher among these unlucky cohorts. / Los tres capítulos de esta tesis doctoral investigan aspectos de la economía del bienestar y de la salud. El primer capítulo pone a prueba la racionalidad de las predicciones de las personas respecto a la satisfacción global que experimentarán con su vida en el futuro. Se muestra que, en contra de la hipótesis de expectativas racionales, las predicciones de los jóvenes y de quien está satisfecho con su vida son más altas que los niveles de satisfacción realizados posteriormente, mientras las predicciones de las personas mayores y de quien no está satisfecho con su vida son más bajas que los niveles posteriormente experimentados. El segundo capítulo investiga cómo los cambios exógenos de riqueza afectan la salud de una muestra de jubilados en los EEUU. Los resultados indican efectos positivos de la riqueza sobre la salud, tanto física como mental, y un efecto negativo sobre la mortalidad. El tercer capítulo analiza los efectos de graduarse de la universidad en un entorno económico recesivo sobre la salud, la riqueza, y la mortalidad. Graduarse en tiempos de recesión tiene efectos negativos persistentes sobre el salario, la cobertura médica, y - durante la epidemia del SIDA - tambien sobre la mortalidad.
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