Shocks and Business Cycles
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David M Frankel
and Krzysztof Burdzy
A popular theory of business cycles is that they are driven by animal spirits: shifts in expectations brought on by sunspots. A prominent example is Howitt and McAfee (AER, 1992). We show that this model has a unique equilibrium if there are payoff shocks of any size. This equilibrium still has the desirable property that recessions and expansions can occur without any large exogenous shocks. We give an algorithm for computing the equilibrium and study its comparative statics properties. This work generalizes Burdzy, Frankel, and Pauzner (2000) to the case of endogenous frictions and seasonal and mean-reverting shocks.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Advances Article
- Asymmetric Vertical Integration
- Shocks and Business Cycles
- Identification of Preferences from Market Data
- On the Right-of-First-Refusal
- Denial of Death and Economic Behavior
- Contributions Article
- Utility Equivalence in Auctions
- Pollution Taxes for Monopolistically Competitive Firms
- On the Welfare Evaluation of Income and Opportunity
- Inefficiency of Collusion at English Auctions
- Limited Attention as the Bound on Rationality
- Topics Article
- Upward and Downward Limit Pricing: The Role of Post-Entry Competition
- Anonymous Bidding and Revenue Maximization
- Citizen Candidacy With Asymmetric Information
- Likely Events and Possible States
Articles in the same Issue
- Advances Article
- Asymmetric Vertical Integration
- Shocks and Business Cycles
- Identification of Preferences from Market Data
- On the Right-of-First-Refusal
- Denial of Death and Economic Behavior
- Contributions Article
- Utility Equivalence in Auctions
- Pollution Taxes for Monopolistically Competitive Firms
- On the Welfare Evaluation of Income and Opportunity
- Inefficiency of Collusion at English Auctions
- Limited Attention as the Bound on Rationality
- Topics Article
- Upward and Downward Limit Pricing: The Role of Post-Entry Competition
- Anonymous Bidding and Revenue Maximization
- Citizen Candidacy With Asymmetric Information
- Likely Events and Possible States