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Provedor de dados:  AgEcon
País:  United States
Título:  Adjustment is Much Slower than You Think
Autores:  Caballero, Ricardo J.
Engel, Eduardo M.R.A.
Data:  2006-01-27
Ano:  2003
Palavras-chave:  Speed of adjustment
Discrete adjustment
Lumpy adjustment
Aggregation
Calvo model
ARMA process
Partial adjustment
Expected response time
Monetary policy
Investment
Labor demand
Sticky prices
Idiosyncratic shocks
Impulse response function
Wold representation
Time-to-build
Financial Economics
C22
C43
D2
E2
E5
Resumo:  In most instances, the dynamic response of monetary and other policies to shocks is infrequent and lumpy. The same holds for the microeconomic response of some of the most important economic variables, such as investment, labor demand, and prices. We show that the standard practice of estimating the speed of adjustment of such variables with partial-adjustment ARMA procedures substantially overestimates this speed. For example, for the target federal funds rate, we find that the actual response to shocks is less than half as fast as the estimated response. For investment, labor demand and prices, the speed of adjustment inferred from aggregates of a small number of agents is likely to be close to instantaneous. While aggregating across microeconomic units reduces the bias (the limit of which is illustrated by Rotemberg’s widely used linear aggregate characterization of Calvo’s model of sticky prices), in some instances convergence is extremely slow. For example, even after aggregating investment across all establishments in U.S. manufacturing, the estimate of its speed of adjustment to shocks is biased upward by more than 80 percent. While the bias is not as extreme for labor demand and prices, it still remains significant at high levels of aggregation. Because the bias rises with disaggregation, findings of microeconomic adjustment that is substantially faster than aggregate adjustment are generally suspect.
Tipo:  Working or Discussion Paper
Idioma:  Inglês
Identificador:  19613

http://purl.umn.edu/28419
Editor:  AgEcon Search
Relação:  Yale University>Economic Growth Center>Center Discussion Papers
Center Discussion Paper No. 865
Formato:  31

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