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Money, interest, and policy. Dynamic general equilibrium in a non-Ricardian world

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  • 214pages
  • 8 heures de lecture

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An important recent advancement in macroeconomics is the development of dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) macromodels. The use of DSGE models to study monetary policy, however, has led to paradoxical and puzzling results on a number of central monetary issues including price determinacy and liquidity effects. In Money, Interest, and Policy, Jean-Pascal Bénassy argues that moving from the standard DSGE models€”which he calls "Ricardian" because they have the famous "Ricardian equivalence" property€”to another, "non-Ricardian" model would resolve many of these issues. A Ricardian model represents a household as a homogeneous family of infinitely lived individuals, and Bénassy demonstrates that a single modification€”the assumption that new agents are born over time (which makes the model non-Ricardian)€”can bridge the current gap between monetary intuitions and facts, on one hand, and rigorous modeling, on the other. After comparing R

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Money, interest, and policy. Dynamic general equilibrium in a non-Ricardian world, JeanPascal Bénassy

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Année de publication
2007
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Titre
Money, interest, and policy. Dynamic general equilibrium in a non-Ricardian world
Langue
Anglais
Éditeur
MIT Press
Publié
2007
Format
rigide
Pages
214
ISBN10
0262026139
ISBN13
9780262026130
Séries
Description
An important recent advancement in macroeconomics is the development of dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) macromodels. The use of DSGE models to study monetary policy, however, has led to paradoxical and puzzling results on a number of central monetary issues including price determinacy and liquidity effects. In Money, Interest, and Policy, Jean-Pascal Bénassy argues that moving from the standard DSGE models€”which he calls "Ricardian" because they have the famous "Ricardian equivalence" property€”to another, "non-Ricardian" model would resolve many of these issues. A Ricardian model represents a household as a homogeneous family of infinitely lived individuals, and Bénassy demonstrates that a single modification€”the assumption that new agents are born over time (which makes the model non-Ricardian)€”can bridge the current gap between monetary intuitions and facts, on one hand, and rigorous modeling, on the other. After comparing R