Examining Sectoral Co-Movement in Estimated Nominal Rigidities Models
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Junhee Lee
Recently, Barsky et al. (2007) found that a sticky-price model does not generate sectoral co-movement and that the propagation mechanism is weak in response to monetary shocks if prices in the durable goods sector are significantly flexible, which raises a co-movement problem in sticky-price models. In this paper, we estimate sticky-price models with both durable and nondurable goods sectors in order to examine sectoral price stickiness and co-movement using actual data. The estimation results show that prices in both sectors are relatively sticky and the co-movement problem does not occur in the usual settings. We find, however, that the co-movement problem may occur when we introduce persistent price-markup shocks in a sticky-price model. We also estimate nominal rigidities models with sticky wages as well as sticky prices and find that sticky wages are helpful in explaining sectoral co-movement in addition to sticky prices.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Contributions Article
- Monetary Policy and Central Bank Balance Sheet Concerns
- The Transmission of Foreign Interest Rate Shocks to a Small-Open Economy: The Role of External Debt and Financial Integration
- Money and Barter under Private Information
- The Cost of Cyclical Mortality
- Interest Rate Conundrum
- Competitive Search Equilibrium with Private Information on Monetary Shocks
- Rational Inattention and Aggregate Fluctuations
- Optimal Monetary Policy in a Financially Fragile Economy
- Settlement Systems
- A Model of Sequential City Growth
- A Neoclassical Analysis of the Postwar Japanese Economy
- Empirics of Strategic Interdependence: The Case of the Racial Tipping Point
- Does Model Uncertainty Justify Conservatism? Robustness and the Delegation of Monetary Policy
- Can Financial Frictions Help Explain the Performance of the U.S. Fed?
- To Work or Not to Work: Did Tax Reforms Affect Labor Force Participation of Married Couples?
- Foreign Aid, Donor Fragmentation, and Economic Growth
- The Response of Household Expenditure to Anticipated Income Changes: Bonus Payments and the Seasonality of Consumption in Japan
- Of Nutters and Doves
- Topics Article
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- On Balance Sheets, Idiosyncratic Risk and Aggregate Volatility
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- Financial Development and Pay-As-You-Go Social Security
- Inflation Range Targets with Hard Edges
- Model Misspecification, Learning and the Exchange Rate Disconnect Puzzle
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