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What (Really) Accounts for the Fall in Hours After a Technology Shock? / / Nooman Rebei



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Autore: Rebei Nooman Visualizza persona
Titolo: What (Really) Accounts for the Fall in Hours After a Technology Shock? / / Nooman Rebei Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Washington, D.C. : , : International Monetary Fund, , 2012
Edizione: 1st ed.
Descrizione fisica: 1 online resource (42 p.)
Disciplina: 332.152
Soggetto topico: Labor supply - Effect of technological innovations on - Mathematical models
Hours of labor - Effect of technological innovations on - Econometric models
Deflation
Diffusion Processes
Dynamic Quantile Regressions
Dynamic Treatment Effect Models
Econometric analysis
Econometrics & economic statistics
Econometrics
General issues
Income economics
Inflation
Innovation
Intellectual Property Rights: General
Labor economics
Labor Economics: General
Labor
Labour
Macroeconomics
Price Level
Prices
Real wages
Research and Development
State Space Models
Sticky prices
Structural vector autoregression
Technological Change
Technology
Time-Series Models
Wages
Wages, Compensation, and Labor Costs: General
Soggetto geografico: United States
Note generali: Description based upon print version of record.
Nota di bibliografia: Includes bibliographical references.
Nota di contenuto: Cover; Contents; I. Introduction; II. Stylized facts and the RBC model; A. Stylized facts; Figures; 1. SVAR IRFs following a technology shock; B. The benchmark RBC model; 1. Representative household's and firm's problems; 2. Impulse-response functions; III. Alternative models; A. The sticky price (SP) model; 2. Impulse-response functions: SVAR versus the standard RBC model; B. The entry-exit (EE) model; 3. Impulse-response functions: SVAR versus the SP model; C. The habit in consumption (HC) model; 4. Impulse-response functions: SVAR versus the EE model
5. Impulse-response functions: SVAR versus the HC modelD. The persistent technology shock (PT) model; E. The labor friction (LF) model; 6. Impulse-response functions: SVAR versus the PT model; F. The Leontief production (LP) model; 7. Impulse-response functions: SVAR versus the LF model; IV. Full information estimation and model comparison; 8. Impulse-response functions: SVAR versus the LP model; A. Priors and data; Tables; 1. Prior distributions of parameters; B. Estimation results and model comparison; 2. Parameter Estimation Results; C. Impulse-response functions
9. IRFs of the Alternative Estimated ModelsD. Autocorrelation functions; 10. Autocorrelations of the Alternative Models; 3. Autocorrelation statistics; V. Robustness; 4. Estimation results with sticky wages; 11. Autocorrelations: SP versus HC model; VI. Conclusion; References
Sommario/riassunto: The paper asks how state of the art DSGE models that account for the conditional response of hours following a positive neutral technology shock compare in a marginal likelihood race. To that end we construct and estimate several competing small-scale DSGE models that extend the standard real business cycle model. In particular, we identify from the literature six different hypotheses that generate the empirically observed decline in worked hours after a positive technology shock. These models alternatively exhibit (i) sticky prices; (ii) firm entry and exit with time to build; (iii) habit in consumption and costly adjustment of investment; (iv) persistence in the permanent technology shocks; (v) labor market friction with procyclical hiring costs; and (vi) Leontief production function with labor-saving technology shocks. In terms of model posterior probabilities, impulse responses, and autocorrelations, the model favored is the one that exhibits habit formation in consumption and investment adjustment costs. A robustness test shows that the sticky price model becomes as competitive as the habit formation and costly adjustment of investment model when sticky wages are included.
Titolo autorizzato: What (Really) Accounts for the Fall in Hours After a Technology Shock  Visualizza cluster
ISBN: 9781475524154
1475524153
9781475552362
147555236X
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910957395503321
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Serie: IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ; ; No. 2012/211