Kurt MIT-shock-man
@sorrytobekurt.bsky.social
850 followers
79 following
14 posts
Prof cemfi. Former Editor Restud. Macro, food, coffee and cocktails. 🌈🇩🇪🇸🇪🇺🇸
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Reposted by Kurt MIT-shock-man
Mishel Ghassibe 🇺🇦
@mickeygb.bsky.social
· May 19
Reposted by Kurt MIT-shock-man
Ludo Visschers
@lpvisschers.bsky.social
· May 19
Reposted by Kurt MIT-shock-man
Erik Öberg
@erikoberg.bsky.social
· Jan 16
DP19823 Stimulus Effects of Common Fiscal Policies
We study the output responses to common fiscal policies in a macroeconomic framework with a frictional labor market, incomplete asset market and nominal rigidities. The frame- work admits data-consistent dynamics of hiring and firing and consumption responses to job loss, making it suitable for comparing the stabilizing effects of several household transfer policies and firm subsidies. Despite its richness, the model’s sequence-space representation is analytically tractable as a directed cycle graph between three blocks. This allows an “information-poor” ranking of fiscal multipliers on the basis of their partial-equilibrium fiscal costs alone, and identifies their key determinants. A baseline calibration predicts large differences in fiscal multipliers across policies. Relative to an increase in government consumption, the efficacy of universal or conditional transfers to households hinges on the degree of partial consumption insurance (through marginal propensities to consume and the response of precautionary savings). The relative efficacy of firm transfers depends on the elasticities of vacancies and separations to job values, the marginal propensity to consume out of dividend income, and the degree of nominal frictions.
cepr.org
Reposted by Kurt MIT-shock-man
Reposted by Kurt MIT-shock-man