On the Friedman Rule in Search Models with Divisible Money
-
Aleksander Berentsen
und Guillaume Rocheteau
This paper studies the validity of the Friedman rule in a search model with divisible money and divisible goods in which the terms of trades are determined endogenously. We show that ex post bargaining generates a holdup problem similar to the one emphasized in the labor-market literature. Buyers cannot obtain the full return that an additional unit of money provides to the match, which makes the purchasing power of money inefficiently low in equilibrium. Consequently, even though the Friedman rule maximizes the purchasing power of money, it fails to generate the first-best allocation of resources unless buyers have all the bargaining power.
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- Interpreting the Significance of the Lagged Interest Rate in Estimated Monetary Policy Rules
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- On the Friedman Rule in Search Models with Divisible Money
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Topics Article
- Balance of Payments Constrained Non-Scale Growth and the Population Puzzle
- The Human Capital Constraint: Of Increasing Returns, Education Choice and Coordination Failure
- ``To Furnish an Elastic Currency'': Banking, Aggregate Risk, and Welfare
- How Prudent are Community Representative Consumers?
- Price Distribution in a Symmetric Economy
- The Role of Stock Markets in Current Account Dynamics: a Time Series Approach
- Shiftwork, Adjustment Costs and Uncertainty
- How Do Future Constraints Affect Current Investment?
- The Politics of Endogenous Growth
- Sticky Prices, Coordination and Enforcement
- Fractional Integration with Bloomfield Disturbances in the Specification of Real Output in the G7 Countries
- Monetary Policy When the Nominal Short-Term Interest Rate is Zero
- High-Tech Human Capital: Do the Richest Countries Invest the Most?
- Substitution Elasticities and Investment Dynamics in Two-Country Business Cycle Models
- Contributions Article
- On Modeling the Effects of Inflation Shocks: Comments and Some Further Evidence
- Optimal Monetary Policy and the Correlation between Prices and Output
- Are Banking Supervisory Data Useful for Macroeconomic Forecasts?
- An Analytical Approach to the Welfare Cost of Business Cycles and the Benefit from Activist Monetary Policy
- Interpreting the Significance of the Lagged Interest Rate in Estimated Monetary Policy Rules
- Idle Capital and Long-Run Productivity
- The Money Metric, Price and Quantity Aggregation and Welfare Measurement
- Parente and Prescott's Theory May Work in Practice But Does Not Work in Theory
- Explaining Movements in the Labor Share
- Endogenous Growth with Intertemporally Dependent Preferences
- On the Friedman Rule in Search Models with Divisible Money
- Finance Causes Growth: Can We Be So Sure?
- Advances Article
- Where Is the Natural Rate? Rational Policy Mistakes and Persistent Deviations of Inflation from Target
- Downward Nominal Wage Rigidity: Evidence from the Employment Cost Index