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The Relative Price and Relative Productivity Channels for Aggregate Fluctuations Author info | Abstract | Publisher info | Download info | Related research | Statistics Eric Swanson (Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco)
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This paper demonstrates that sectoral heterogeneity itself, without additional bells or whistles, has important, first-order implications for the transmission of aggregate shocks to aggregate variables in an otherwise standard DSGE model. The effects of sectoral heterogeneity on this transmission are decomposed into two channels: a "relative price" channel and a "relative productivity" channel. The relative price channel results from changes in the relative prices of aggregates, such as investment vs. consumption, in response to a shock. The relative productivity channel arises from changes in the distribution of inputs across sectors. We show that, for standard multi-sector models, this latter channel is second-order, but becomes first-order if we consider a nontraded input such as capital utilization or introduce a wedge that thwarts the steady-state equalization of marginal products of a traded input across sectors. For reasonable parameterizations, the relative productivity channel causes aggregate productivity to vary procyclically in response to even non-technological shocks, such as changes in government purchases.
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Article provided by Berkeley Electronic Press in its journal Contributions to Macroeconomics .
Volume (Year): 6 (2006)
Issue (Month): 1 ()
Pages: 1293-1293
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Keywords: sectoral heterogeneity adjustment costs DSGE models amplification propagation procyclical productivity Other versions of this item:
Find related papers by JEL classification: E32 - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics - - Prices, Business Fluctuations, and Cycles - - - Business Fluctuations; Cycles
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