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Recurrent Bubbles and Economic Growth

Author

Listed:
  • Pablo Guerron-Quintana

    (Boston College and Espol)

  • Tomohiro Hirano

    (Royal Holloway, University of London
    London School of Economics (LSE)
    Centre for Macroeconomics (CFM)
    The Canon Institute for Global Studies)

  • Ryo Jinnai

    (Hitotsubashi University)

Abstract

We study a regime-switching recurrent bubble model with endogenous growth. The economy experiences both bubbly and bubbleless regimes recurrently. Infinitely-lived households expect future bubbles, which crowds out investment and reduces economic growth. Because realized bubbles crowd in investment, their overall impact on economic growth and welfare crucially depends on both the level of financial development and the frequency of bubbles. We examine U.S. economic growth performance through the lens of our model, finding evidence of recurrent bubbles. Furthermore, counterfactual simulations suggest that 1) the IT and housing bubbles together lifted the U.S. GDP by almost 2 percentage points permanently; and 2) the U.S. economy could have grown faster if people had believed that asset bubbles were impossible to arise.

Suggested Citation

  • Pablo Guerron-Quintana & Tomohiro Hirano & Ryo Jinnai, 2020. "Recurrent Bubbles and Economic Growth," Discussion Papers 2012, Centre for Macroeconomics (CFM).
  • Handle: RePEc:cfm:wpaper:2012
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    3. Nicolò Maffei-Faccioli, 2021. "Identifying the sources of the slowdown in growth: Demand vs. supply," Working Paper 2021/9, Norges Bank.
    4. Nina Biljanovska & Lucyna Gornicka & Alexandros Vardoulakis, 2019. "Optimal Macroprudential Policy and Asset Price Bubbles," IMF Working Papers 2019/184, International Monetary Fund.
    5. Zhang, Xiaoge, 2022. "Belief-driven growth slowdowns and zero-bounded risk-free rate," The North American Journal of Economics and Finance, Elsevier, vol. 59(C).
    6. Nicolo Maffei-Faccioli, 2020. "Identifying the Sources of the Slowdown in Growth: Demand vs. Supply," 2020 Papers pma2978, Job Market Papers.
    7. Awaya, Yu & Iwasaki, Kohei & Watanabe, Makoto, 2022. "Rational bubbles and middlemen," Theoretical Economics, Econometric Society, vol. 17(4), November.

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