Trend breaks, long-run restrictions, and contractionary technology improvements

被引:78
作者
Fernald, John G. [1 ]
机构
[1] Fed Reserve Bank San Francisco, San Francisco, CA USA
关键词
technology; business cycles; structural change; long-run restrictions;
D O I
10.1016/j.jmoneco.2007.06.031
中图分类号
F8 [财政、金融];
学科分类号
0202 ;
摘要
Structural vector autoregressions with long-run restrictions are extraordinarily sensitive to low-frequency correlations. Recent literature finds that the estimated effects of technology shocks are sensitive to how one treats hours per capita. However, after allowing for (statistically and economically significant) trend breaks in productivity, results are much less sensitive: hours fall when technology improves. The issue is that the common high-low-high pattern of productivity growth and hours (i.e., the low-frequency correlation) inevitably leads to a positive estimated response. The trend breaks control for this correlation. This example suggests a practical need for care in using long-run restrictions. (c) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:2467 / 2485
页数:19
相关论文
共 33 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 2004, NBER MACROECONOMICS
[2]   Computation and analysis of multiple structural change models [J].
Bai, J ;
Perron, P .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECONOMETRICS, 2003, 18 (01) :1-22
[3]   Estimating and testing linear models with multiple structural changes [J].
Bai, JS ;
Perron, P .
ECONOMETRICA, 1998, 66 (01) :47-78
[4]   The cost of business cycles under endogenous growth [J].
Barlevy, G .
AMERICAN ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2004, 94 (04) :964-990
[5]   Are technology improvements contractionary? [J].
Basu, Susanto ;
Fernald, John G. ;
Kimball, Miles S. .
AMERICAN ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2006, 96 (05) :1418-1448
[6]  
BLANCHARD OJ, 1989, AM ECON REV, V79, P655
[7]   INSPECTING THE MECHANISM - AN ANALYTICAL APPROACH TO THE STOCHASTIC GROWTH-MODEL [J].
CAMPBELL, JY .
JOURNAL OF MONETARY ECONOMICS, 1994, 33 (03) :463-506
[8]  
CANOVA E, 2007, UNPUB LABOR MARKET E
[9]  
CHARI VV, 2005, 631 FRB
[10]  
CHRISTIANO L, 2006, 866 BOARD GOV FED RE