Sticky Price Models of the Business Cycle: Can the Contract Multiplier Solve the Persistence Problem?

We construct a quantitative equilibrium model with firms setting prices in a staggered fashion and use it to ask whether monetary shocks can generate business cycle fluctuations. These fluctuations include persistent movements in output along with the other defining features of business cycles, like...

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Veröffentlicht in:Econometrica 2000-09, Vol.68 (5), p.1151-1179
Hauptverfasser: Chari, V. V., Kehoe, Patrick J., Mcgrattan, Ellen R.
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container_title Econometrica
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creator Chari, V. V.
Kehoe, Patrick J.
Mcgrattan, Ellen R.
description We construct a quantitative equilibrium model with firms setting prices in a staggered fashion and use it to ask whether monetary shocks can generate business cycle fluctuations. These fluctuations include persistent movements in output along with the other defining features of business cycles, like volatile investment and smooth consumption. We assume that prices are exogenously sticky for a short time. Persistent output fluctuations require endogenous price stickiness in the sense that firms choose not to change prices much when they can do so. We find that for a wide range of parameter values, the amount of endogenous stickiness is small. Thus, we find that in a standard quantitative model, staggered price-setting, alone, does not generate business cycle fluctuations.
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1468-0262
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source Periodicals Index Online; JSTOR Mathematics & Statistics; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; Wiley Online Library All Journals
subjects Applied sciences
Business cycles
Econometrics
Economic fluctuations
Economic growth models
Economic modeling
Economic models
Economic theory
Elasticity of demand
endogenous price stickiness
Exact sciences and technology
Intermediate goods
monetary business cycles
Money demand
Money supply
Operational research and scientific management
Operational research. Management science
Portfolio theory
Price shocks
Price stickiness
Prices
Pricing policies
Staggered price-setting
Studies
title Sticky Price Models of the Business Cycle: Can the Contract Multiplier Solve the Persistence Problem?
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