Final Exam Advanced Macroeconomics I

Similar documents
UNIVERSITY OF OSLO DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

The Brock-Mirman Stochastic Growth Model

Macroeconomic Theory Ph.D. Qualifying Examination Fall 2005 ANSWER EACH PART IN A SEPARATE BLUE BOOK. PART ONE: ANSWER IN BOOK 1 WEIGHT 1/3

Suggested Solutions to Assignment 4 (REQUIRED) Submisson Deadline and Location: March 27 in Class

Problem Set 5. Graduate Macro II, Spring 2017 The University of Notre Dame Professor Sims

Cooperative Ph.D. Program in School of Economic Sciences and Finance QUALIFYING EXAMINATION IN MACROECONOMICS. August 8, :45 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.

A Dynamic Model of Economic Fluctuations

The Brock-Mirman Stochastic Growth Model

Explaining Total Factor Productivity. Ulrich Kohli University of Geneva December 2015

1 Answers to Final Exam, ECN 200E, Spring

Lecture 3: Solow Model II Handout

E β t log (C t ) + M t M t 1. = Y t + B t 1 P t. B t 0 (3) v t = P tc t M t Question 1. Find the FOC s for an optimum in the agent s problem.

Macroeconomics I, UPF Professor Antonio Ciccone SOLUTIONS PROBLEM SET 1

( ) (, ) F K L = F, Y K N N N N. 8. Economic growth 8.1. Production function: Capital as production factor

Lecture Notes 3: Quantitative Analysis in DSGE Models: New Keynesian Model

Solutions Problem Set 3 Macro II (14.452)

MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION IN A DSGE MODEL: PART II OCTOBER 4, 2011 BUILDING THE EQUILIBRIUM. p = 1. Dixit-Stiglitz Model

Final Exam. Tuesday, December hours

Different assumptions in the literature: Wages/prices set one period in advance and last for one period

Problem Set #3: AK models

Lecture Notes 5: Investment

Graduate Macroeconomics 2 Problem set 4. - Solutions

Chapter 15 A Model with Periodic Wage Contracts

T. J. HOLMES AND T. J. KEHOE INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND PAYMENTS THEORY FALL 2011 EXAMINATION

Policy regimes Theory

Chapter 13 A New Keynesian Model with Periodic Wage Contracts

Problem Set on Differential Equations

Economic Growth & Development: Part 4 Vertical Innovation Models. By Kiminori Matsuyama. Updated on , 11:01:54 AM

Online Appendix to Solution Methods for Models with Rare Disasters

Economics 8105 Macroeconomic Theory Recitation 6

The general Solow model

3.1.3 INTRODUCTION TO DYNAMIC OPTIMIZATION: DISCRETE TIME PROBLEMS. A. The Hamiltonian and First-Order Conditions in a Finite Time Horizon

Chapter 14 A Model of Imperfect Competition and Staggered Pricing

Disentangling the effects of oil shocks: the role of rigidities and monetary policy

Full file at

A Note on Raising the Mandatory Retirement Age and. Its Effect on Long-run Income and Pay As You Go (PAYG) Pensions

Essential Microeconomics : OPTIMAL CONTROL 1. Consider the following class of optimization problems

Seminar 5 Sustainability

Fall 2015 Final Examination (200 pts)

Intermediate Macro In-Class Problems

This document was generated at 7:34 PM, 07/27/09 Copyright 2009 Richard T. Woodward

Problem Set #1 - Answers

Unemployment and Mismatch in the UK

LABOR MATCHING MODELS: BASIC DSGE IMPLEMENTATION APRIL 12, 2012

1 Consumption and Risky Assets

Long-run growth effects of taxation in a non-scale growth model with innovation

Problem set 3: Endogenous Innovation - Solutions

BOKDSGE: A DSGE Model for the Korean Economy

ANSWERS TO EVEN NUMBERED EXERCISES IN CHAPTER 6 SECTION 6.1: LIFE CYCLE CONSUMPTION AND WEALTH T 1. . Let ct. ) is a strictly concave function of c

Macroeconomic Theory III: Competitive Equilibrium (Real) Business Cycles

A Note on Public Debt, Tax-Exempt Bonds, and Ponzi Games

ECON 482 / WH Hong Time Series Data Analysis 1. The Nature of Time Series Data. Example of time series data (inflation and unemployment rates)

pe pt dt = e pt Probabilty of death given survival till t : pe pt = p Expected life at t : pe(s t)p ds = e (s t)p t =

The Real Exchange Rate, Real Interest Rates, and the Risk Premium. Charles Engel University of Wisconsin

1. Consider a pure-exchange economy with stochastic endowments. The state of the economy

Appendix to The Macroeconomics of Trend Inflation Journal of Economic Literature, September 2014

Advanced Macroeconomics 5. PRODUCTIVE EXTERNALITIES AND ENDOGENOUS GROWTH

Vehicle Arrival Models : Headway

Problem 1 / 25 Problem 2 / 20 Problem 3 / 10 Problem 4 / 15 Problem 5 / 30 TOTAL / 100

Monetary Policy in Open Economies: Price Inertia and Inflation Targeting

= ( ) ) or a system of differential equations with continuous parametrization (T = R

The Aggregate Implications of Innovative Investment in the Garcia-Macia, Hsieh, and Klenow Model (preliminary and incomplete)

15.023J / J / ESD.128J Global Climate Change: Economics, Science, and Policy Spring 2008

Lecture 19. RBC and Sunspot Equilibria

grows at a constant rate. Besides these classical facts, there also other empirical regularities which growth theory must account for.

On Measuring Pro-Poor Growth. 1. On Various Ways of Measuring Pro-Poor Growth: A Short Review of the Literature

( ) a system of differential equations with continuous parametrization ( T = R + These look like, respectively:

Optimal Monetary Policy with the Cost Channel: Appendix (not for publication)

A User s Guide to Solving Real Business Cycle Models. by a single representative agent. It is assumed that both output and factor markets are

BEGIN BLUEBOOK A BEGIN BLUEBOOK A BEGIN BLUEBOOK A

On the Role of Financial Frictions and the Saving Rate during Trade Liberalizations

CHAPTER II THE BASICS OF INTERTEMPORAL GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM

NOMINAL RIGIDITIES IN A DSGE MODEL: THE CANONICAL NEW KEYNESIAN MODEL OCTOBER 18, 2011 THE AGGREGATE SUPPLY BLOCK. Simplifying the NK Model

Macroeconomics Qualifying Examination

Solutions to Odd Number Exercises in Chapter 6

Worker flows and matching efficiency

A Note on Factor Prices and Technical Progress

On the Taylor Rule and Optimal Monetary Policy in a Natural Rate Model. George Alogoskoufis*

A Test of Identification for Government Spending Shocks.

Decentralizing the Growth Model. 5/4/96 version

Dealing with the Trilemma: Optimal Capital Controls with Fixed Exchange Rates

Graduate Macro Theory II: A New Keynesian Model with Price Stickiness

Midterm Exam. Macroeconomic Theory (ECON 8105) Larry Jones. Fall September 27th, Question 1: (55 points)

Transition dynamics in aggregate models of innovative investment

HOTELLING LOCATION MODEL

COMPETITIVE GROWTH MODEL

Graduate Macro Theory II: Notes on Neoclassical Growth Model

A New-Keynesian Model

Dynamics of Firms and Trade in General Equilibrium. Robert Dekle, Hyeok Jeong and Nobuhiro Kiyotaki USC, KDI School and Princeton

Optimal Monetary Policy in the New Keynesian Model

Let us start with a two dimensional case. We consider a vector ( x,

ElasticityofSubstitution and Growth: Normalized CES in the Diamond Model

Introduction to choice over time

23.2. Representing Periodic Functions by Fourier Series. Introduction. Prerequisites. Learning Outcomes

constant and variable capital

Physics 235 Chapter 2. Chapter 2 Newtonian Mechanics Single Particle

Looking at the FTPL through a Unified Macro Model

Does External Habit Formation Help Increase Real Exchange Rate

1 Price Indexation and In ation Inertia

A Large Central Bank Balance Sheet? The Role of Interbank Market Frictions

Transcription:

Advanced Macroeconomics I WS 00/ Final Exam Advanced Macroeconomics I February 8, 0 Quesion (5%) An economy produces oupu according o α α Y = K (AL) of which a fracion s is invesed. echnology A is exogenous and consan. he growh rae of he labor force is n and he depreciaion rae is δ. Assume 0 < α <. a) Demonsrae ha he producion funcion exhibis consan reurns o scale. b) Calculae seady-sae per-capia oupu. c) Assuming perfec compeiion, calculae he seady-sae levels of he wage rae and of he rae of reurn o capial. d) Wha would a doubling of A do o he wage rae, o he reurn o capial and o he income shares of capial and labor? Quesion (5%) Discussing he role of various componens of GDP in he business cycle, David Romer poins ou in his exbook ha for he Unied Saes, he average conribuion o he fall in GDP in recessions. differs markedly beween nondurable consumpion and invesmen;. is negaive for ne expors. a) Wha does i mean o sae ha he conribuion of ne expors o recessions is negaive? b) Give a brief explanaion for each of he wo saed facs. c) Looking back a he mos recen recession of 009, did Germany conform o he wo facs?

Advanced Macroeconomics I WS 00/ Quesion 3 (5%) As Charles Plosser has poined ou, he properies of he Real Business Cycle Model can be inerpreed in erms of he raional behavior of a uiliymaximizing Robinson Crusoe. Consider an increase in Robinson s produciviy. Explain in words he response of his producion, consumpion, invesmen and work effor a) under he assumpion ha he produciviy increase is shor-lived; b) under he assumpion ha he produciviy increase is permanen. Quesion 4 (35%) Consider a model along he lines of Clarida, Galí, and Gerler (JEL 999) [noaion as in heir paper, unless oherwise saed]: () L = [ α ( x k) + ( π π ) ] + F F, k, π : exogenous () π = λx + Eπ + + u (3) x [ ] = φ i Eπ + + E x+ + g (4) u = ρ u uˆ + 0 < ρ < (5) g = g g gˆ 0 + μ + 0 < μ <, g 0 > 0: exogenous û and ĝ are random variables wih mean zero. a) Wha is he meaning of F, k, π and 0 g? b) Derive he firs-order condiion for an opimal discreionary moneary policy. c) Solve for he long-run no-shock equilibrium values of x, π, g and i. b) Could moneary policy be improved over he oucome obained in c)? Discuss.

Advanced Macroeconomics I WS 00/ Quesion Final Exam Advanced Macroeconomics I Soluion Ouline a) Consan reurns o scale: if boh facor inpus (labor and capial) change by he same arbirary facor a, oupu should change by he same facor a: α α α α ( ak ) ( AaL) = a( K ) ( AL) = ay b) () y Y L = k A () k& = s y ( n + δ )k α α From k & α = 0 s( k A α ) = ( n + δ ) k, we solve for (3)/(4) k = s ( n + δ ) α A y = s ( n + δ ) α α A c) Wih perfec compeiion, w = MPL, and capial: r = MPK. Calculaing he marginal producs of labor w = α k A α α (5) ( ) (6) r = αk α α A Subsiuing he seady sae value k ino boh funcions: (7) r = α ( n + δ ) (8) w = ( α ) A ( ) s s n + δ α α d) Doubling A will double he seady sae wage rae whereas he seady sae value of r remains consan. As can be seen from (3) and (4), he new seady sae values of k and y will increase proporionally wih A as well. he labor and he capial shares are no affeced by changes in A as hey are deermined purely by he producion echnology: wl w rk k Labor share λl = = = α Capial share λ K = = r = α Y y Y y

Advanced Macroeconomics I WS 00/ Quesion a) If he average conribuion of ne expors o recessions is negaive, his means ha ne expors go up while oupu falls. b) Nondurable consumpion does no vary ha much over he business cycle due o he consumpion smoohing moive. In conras, invesmen conribues srongly o recessions as firms aemp o downsize heir producion capaciy. he negaive average conribuion of ne expors o recessions reflecs he fac ha he U.S. business cycle is largely driven by flucuaions in domesic demand which enail corresponding changes in impor demand. Impors ener GDP calculaion wih a negaive sign. c) In he recession of 009, German nondurable consumpion as well as invesmen spending conformed exacly o he paern described by he exbook for he U.S. Ne expors, however, made an imporan posiive conribuion o ha downurn as German expors were hi hard by he global slump.

3 Advanced Macroeconomics I WS 00/ Quesion 3 he effec of an increase in Robinson s produciviy A on his producion Y, consumpion C, invesmen I and work effor L: dl /da dy /da dc /da di /da dl /da > 0 dy /da > 0 dc /da > 0 di /da > 0 a) produciviy increase shor lived he inra emporal subsiuion effec (working in favor of L ) is reinforced by a srong ineremporal subsiuion effec. he income effec, pulling in he oher direcion, is weak. he direc impac of produciviy on oupu is reinforced by he posiive labor supply response. Consumpion responds weakly due o he consumpion smoohing moive. Invesmen responds srongly as, by definiion, i is he difference beween a srong oupu response and a weak consumpion response dl /da < 0 dy /da > 0 dc /da > 0 di /da > 0 b) produciviy increase permanen he ineremporal subsiuion effec is absen and he income effec is srong. (If he inra emporal subsiuion effec is srong enough, he overall effec could be weakly posiive). he direc impac of produciviy on oupu is no reinforced, or is even parially offse by he labor supply response. Consumpion responds srongly o oupu as i adjuss o he permanenly elevaed income pah. Invesmen responds less because he oupu response is weaker and he consumpion response is sronger han in he case of he emporary produciviy change. Difference (dl /da ) a) > (dl /da ) b) (dy /da ) a) > (dy /da ) b) (dc /da ) a) < (dc /da ) b) (di /da ) a) > (di /da ) b)

4 Advanced Macroeconomics I WS 00/ Quesion 4 (35%) a) F : Fuure erms of he loss funcion (discouned expeced fuure losses) k: Desired level of he oupu gap π : arge inflaion rae g : auonomous spending variable (e.g. governmen spending) 0 b) Firs order condiion: he cenral bank s marginal rae of subsiuion (MRS) beween oupu and inflaion mus be equal o λ. Formally: dl = α dπ α( x k) ( x k) dx ( π π ) dπ = 0 = (MRS) dx π π α MRS = λ π π = ( x k) λ c) Solving for he long run no shock equilibrium: x can be deermined by seing π Eπ and u = 0 in eq. (): x = 0. = + π is given by he f.o.c. derived in b), aking ino accoun x = 0: g can be deermined by seing g g and g ˆ = 0 in eq. (5): = α π = π + k λ g0 g = μ Finally, we can solve eq. (3) for i, aking ino accoun he α equilibrium values of x, π and g: i = π + k + g0 λ φ( μ) c) Clearly, discreionary moneary policy is inefficien as i generaes inflaion in excess of he arge rae wihou achieving any oupu gains in reurn (he classic inflaionary bias problem; Resul 5 in he Clarida/Gali/Gerler paper). A mechanism (such as a binding rule) ha forces he cenral bank o pursue a policy consisen wih is inflaion arge would improve maers.