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Competitive Search Equilibrium with Private Information on Monetary Shocks

  • Stella Huangfu
Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 25. März 2009

The relationship between unanticipated inflation and output has been a classic issue in macroeconomics. This paper studies the effects of monetary uncertainty on output in a competitive search environment where there is asymmetric information about monetary shocks. In such an environment, sellers post prices that are contingent on the realization of the shock, and buyers then direct their search towards the most attractive price. The paper proposes a new mechanism for real output effects of monetary shocks: when the realization of the monetary shock is privately observed by buyers, to induce truth-telling behavior, sellers offer more output when the economy experiences a positive monetary shock; otherwise, buyers have an incentive to lie about the state of the world in order to pay low prices. This contrasts with the centralized Walrasian market environment, where nominal shocks by themselves have no real effects.

Published Online: 2009-3-25

©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston

Artikel in diesem Heft

  1. Contributions Article
  2. Monetary Policy and Central Bank Balance Sheet Concerns
  3. The Transmission of Foreign Interest Rate Shocks to a Small-Open Economy: The Role of External Debt and Financial Integration
  4. Money and Barter under Private Information
  5. The Cost of Cyclical Mortality
  6. Interest Rate Conundrum
  7. Competitive Search Equilibrium with Private Information on Monetary Shocks
  8. Rational Inattention and Aggregate Fluctuations
  9. Optimal Monetary Policy in a Financially Fragile Economy
  10. Settlement Systems
  11. A Model of Sequential City Growth
  12. A Neoclassical Analysis of the Postwar Japanese Economy
  13. Empirics of Strategic Interdependence: The Case of the Racial Tipping Point
  14. Does Model Uncertainty Justify Conservatism? Robustness and the Delegation of Monetary Policy
  15. Can Financial Frictions Help Explain the Performance of the U.S. Fed?
  16. To Work or Not to Work: Did Tax Reforms Affect Labor Force Participation of Married Couples?
  17. Foreign Aid, Donor Fragmentation, and Economic Growth
  18. The Response of Household Expenditure to Anticipated Income Changes: Bonus Payments and the Seasonality of Consumption in Japan
  19. Of Nutters and Doves
  20. Topics Article
  21. Fiscal Shocks and Real Rigidities
  22. On Balance Sheets, Idiosyncratic Risk and Aggregate Volatility
  23. Endogenous Liquidity and Currency Unions
  24. Oil Matters: Real Input Prices and U.S. Unemployment Revisited
  25. Financial Development and Pay-As-You-Go Social Security
  26. Inflation Range Targets with Hard Edges
  27. Model Misspecification, Learning and the Exchange Rate Disconnect Puzzle
  28. Estimates of the Marginal Product of Capital, 1970-2000
  29. Examining Sectoral Co-Movement in Estimated Nominal Rigidities Models
  30. The Burden Sharing of Pollution Abatement Costs in Multi-Regional Open Economies
  31. Optimal Monetary Policy with a Convex Phillips Curve
  32. Cointegration and Asymmetric Adjustment: Some New Evidence Concerning the Behavior of the U.S. Current Account
  33. Risk-Adjusted Forecasts of Oil Prices
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  39. Dynamic Optimal Taxation with Human Capital
  40. Unemployment and Productivity, Slowdowns and Speed-Ups: Evidence Using Common Shifts
  41. Unions, Wage Setting and Monetary Policy Uncertainty
  42. Taxing Overtime or Subsidizing Employment
  43. Transitional Dynamics in the Solow-Swan Growth Model with AK Technology and Logistic Population Change
  44. Inflation Targeting: A Framework for Communication
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  46. Total Factor Productivity and Labor Reallocation: The Case of the Korean 1997 Crisis
  47. Inferential Expectations
Heruntergeladen am 2.10.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.2202/1935-1690.1600/html
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