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Dynamic Oligopoly and Price Stickiness

Author

Listed:
  • Ivan Werning

    (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)

Abstract

I study the relationship between aggregate consumption and interest rates when markets are incomplete. I first provide a generalized Euler relation involving the real interest rate, current and future aggregate consumption under extreme illiquidity (no borrowing and no outside assets). This provides a tractable way of incorporating incomplete markets into macroeconomic models. When household income risk is acyclical I show that this relation coincides with that of a representative agent, although time-varying discount factors may potentially act as aggregate demand shocks. The same representation extends to the case with positive liquidity as long as liquidity relative to income is acyclical. A corollary of these `as if' results is that forward guidance policies are as powerful as in representative agent models. Away from the `as if' benchmark, I show that aggregate consumption becomes more sensitive to interest rates, especially future ones, when idiosyncratic income risk is countercyclical or when liquidity is procyclical. Finally, I also apply my analysis to a Real Business Cycle model, providing an exact analytical aggregation result that complements existing numerical findings.

Suggested Citation

  • Ivan Werning, 2018. "Dynamic Oligopoly and Price Stickiness," 2018 Meeting Papers 1029, Society for Economic Dynamics.
  • Handle: RePEc:red:sed018:1029
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    Cited by:

    1. is not listed on IDEAS
    2. Falk Bräuning & José Fillat & Gustavo Joaquim, 2022. "Cost-Price Relationships in a Concentrated Economy," Current Policy Perspectives 94265, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.
    3. James A. Schmitz, 2020. "Monopolies Inflict Great Harm on Low- and Middle-Income Americans," Staff Report 601, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis.
    4. Alessandro Ferrari & Francisco Queirós, 2021. "Firm Heterogeneity, Market Power and Macroeconomic Fragility," CSEF Working Papers 627, Centre for Studies in Economics and Finance (CSEF), University of Naples, Italy.
    5. Ariel T Burstein & Vasco M Carvalho & Basile Grassi, 2025. "Bottom-Up Markup Fluctuations," The Quarterly Journal of Economics, President and Fellows of Harvard College, vol. 140(4), pages 2619-2684.
    6. Suveg, Melinda, 2021. "Does Firm Exit Increase Prices?," Working Paper Series 1414, Research Institute of Industrial Economics.
    7. Anastasia Burya & Rui Mano & Mr. Yannick Timmer & Miss Anke Weber, 2022. "Monetary Policy Under Labor Market Power," IMF Working Papers 2022/128, International Monetary Fund.
    8. Romain Duval & Davide Furceri & Raphaël Lee & Marina M. Tavares, 2024. "Market power and monetary policy transmission," Economica, London School of Economics and Political Science, vol. 91(362), pages 669-700, April.
    9. Michael Klien & Peter Huber & Peter Reschenhofer & Gerlinde Gutheil-Knopp-Kirchwald & Gerald Kössl, 2023. "Die preisdämpfende Wirkung des gemeinnützigen Wohnbaus," WIFO Studies, WIFO, number 69779, June.
    10. David R. Baqaee & Emmanuel Farhi & Kunal Sangani, 2024. "The Supply-Side Effects of Monetary Policy," Journal of Political Economy, University of Chicago Press, vol. 132(4), pages 1065-1112.

    More about this item

    JEL classification:

    • E0 - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics - - General
    • E3 - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics - - Prices, Business Fluctuations, and Cycles
    • E5 - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics - - Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit

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