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Journal ArticleDOI

Market distortions and local indeterminacy: A general approach

01 May 2014-Journal of Economic Theory (Academic Press)-Vol. 151, pp 216-247
TL;DR: In this paper, the role of market distortions on the emergence of indeterminacy and bifurcations is investigated, and it is shown that distortions in the capital market do not play a major role.
About: This article is published in Journal of Economic Theory.The article was published on 2014-05-01 and is currently open access. It has received 7 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Indeterminacy (literature) & Elasticity of substitution.

Summary (4 min read)

1 Introduction

  • In this paper the authors develop a methodology to study and fully characterize the role of market distortions on the occurrence of local indeterminacy and bifurcations.
  • These papers provide examples to apply their general methodology (see Section 4).
  • 3Weak values of this elasticity are not empirically relevant (Hamermesh (1993), Duffy and Papageorgiou (2000)).
  • On the other hand, the authors also discuss the degrees of specific market distortions required for the occurrence of indeterminacy under empirically plausible values (i.e. around one) of the elasticity of capital-labor substitution.
  • The authors confirm, focusing on capital income taxation, that distortions on the capital market do not, per se, promote indeterminacy.

2 The model

  • The authors framework extends the perfectly competitive Woodford model to take into account market imperfections.
  • In the cases of productive externalities, imperfect competition in the product market or with consumption, labor or capital taxation, the real interest rate and/or the real wage relevant to consumers’ decisions are no longer equal to the marginal productivities of capital and labor at the firm level.
  • Empirical studies also show that the wage bill is increasing in labor.
  • Hence, the occurrence of indeterminacy and bifurcations in their framework is due to the existence of market distortions, mainly through their effects on αi,j, which are more relevant than βi,j when inputs are not weak substitutes in production.

3 The role of market distortions on local dy-

  • The authors then analyze the occurrence of indeterminacy and bifurcations by studying how T and D evolve in the space (T,D) as some relevant parameters of the model are made to vary continuously in their admissible range, according to the geometrical method developed in Grandmont et al. (1998).
  • To locate these values in the plane (T,D), three lines are relevant .
  • The first condition, necessary for indeterminacy when D′1 (σ) < 0, can only be met with distortions.
  • Take εγ ∈ [1,∞) as the bifurcation parameter with Hopf, flip and transcritical bifurcation values εγH εγF and εγT , respectively given in (23),(24) and (25).18 (a) Consider that αKK takes either nonpositive or positive values.
  • 18Assumptions 3 and 4 are satisfied in all the examples considered in the related literature, and simplify considerably their analysis.

3.1 Discussion of the results

  • By inspection of Tables 1 and 2, the authors see that, when capital and labor are sufficiently substitutable in production, indeterminacy and bifurcations occur in the presence of market distortions.
  • 20 Indeterminacy requires a critical lower bound on the elasticity of substitution between capital and labor (σ), which may be different across configurations.
  • ΣH1 is no longer a necessary condition for indeterminacy, indeterminacy also requires a lower bound for σ.
  • Indeterminacy also requires a critical upper bound (either ǫγH or ǫγT ) on ǫγ, depending on the configuration considered.
  • This is a new interesting result that will be illustrated and further discussed in the economic examples provided in Section 4.

3.1.1 Distortions on the ̺ and Ω functions

  • The authors start with the case where distortions affecting only the ̺ and Ω functions are present (αΓ,i = βΓ,i = 0), as it happens, for example, when they only have product or capital market distortions (see Section 4).
  • Then, only configurations (i)− (iv) can be obtained (see (19)), where, as seen above, σ > σH1 is a necessary condition for indeterminacy.
  • Let us now discuss in detail the role of distortions affecting the ̺ function.
  • For αK,K > 0, given the necessary condition αL,L > θαK,K, indeterminacy requires a positive value for αL,L.

3.1.2 Distortions on the Ω and Γ functions

  • The authors consider now distortions that only affect both Ω and Γ, i.e. the intertemporal trade-off condition of workers, as it happens, for instance, when they have labor market imperfections (see Section 4).
  • These last two configurations require that αΓL < α ∗ ΓL as shown in (21).
  • Thus, indeterminacy is possible when the only distortion is an arbitrarily small negative αΓ,L.
  • While general distortions on the real interest rate do not seem to play a major role on the occurrence of indeterminacy, distortions on the generalized offer curve and on the effective consumption seem to help the occurrence of indeterminacy.
  • This would require infinitely large elasticities of private labor supply and of substitution between inputs.

4 Applications

  • The authors now proceed by applying their general methodology and results to several examples that provide microeconomic foundations for the model developed above.
  • The strategy used to analyze each example is the following.
  • The authors also discuss the minimal degree of distortions required for indeterminacy to occur with an empirically plausible value of the elasticity of capital-labor substitution (around 1).
  • The authors will see in particular that indeterminacy emerges under new configurations (those of Table 1 and Table 2), and that for some sets of distortions’ parameters indeterminacy requires a value for ǫγ bounded away from 1.

4.1 Examples with the same distortion on the real in-

  • In the examples presented below, the same distortion affects both the real interest rate and the real wage, but the generalized offer curve coincides with the competitive one, Γ(K,L) = γ(L).
  • 28They are usually justified by learning by doing or matching problems on labor market.
  • Hence negative externalities illustrate the result, discussed in Section 3, that indeterminacy cannot occur when αK,i and αL,i are all negative.
  • The authors will now emphasize that, for the analysis of local dynamics, many models with imperfect competition on the product market are, in fact, a particular case of the previous framework with positive productive externalities.
  • The same happens when imperfect competition is associated with markup variability or with taste for variety, as the authors now show.

4.2 Examples with different distortions on the real in-

  • This will allow us to emphasize that capital market distortions are not, per se, the most relevant ones for indeterminacy.
  • The authors start with the case of capital taxation without public spending externalities in preferences, so that market distortions only appear in the function ̺(K,L).
  • 38Notice that this implies that indeterminacy only occurs when υ > 0, i.e., consumption externalities are of the "keeping-up with the Joneses" type.
  • Indeed, when there is only capital income taxation, the steady state is always a saddle.

4.3 Examples with distortions only on the generalized

  • In the examples presented in this section distortions only affect the generalized offer curve.
  • The authors can easily see that Assumptions 1 and 4 are ensured.
  • This shows that it should be misleading to focus only on the case of an infinitely elastic labor supply when the authors want to fully study the role of some labor market distortions on the occurrence of indeterminacy.
  • Therefore, this last model can be seen as a particular case of not too negative aggregate labor externalities in leisure utility.
  • 44Each worker supplies one unit of labor with a labor desutility that depends on the level of effort.

4.4 Examples with distortions on the generalized offer

  • L) and Ω(K,L) are affected by market distortions, while the capital market remains perfectly competitive.the authors.
  • This case is new, and is able to illustrate most of the dynamic results exhibited in the general framework.
  • Unions are able to set wages above a reservation wage, with a markup factor µ(K,L) = 1−αs(K/L) 1−s(K/L) ≥ 1, increasing in the bargaining power of unions (1−α) ∈ [0, 1).47 Employment is determined by the equality between the reservation wage and the marginal productivity of labor.
  • 46See Grandmont (2008) for a more detailed discussion.
  • Assuming that government expenditures (Gt) provide services that affect not only workers’ utility for consumption, but also their desutility of labor, the authors will be able to provide an illustration of configuration (vi).

5 Concluding remarks

  • With their general analysis of the role of market distortions on local dynamics and the different examples of specific distortions presented above, the authors were able to they emphasize several interesting results, some of them already latent in previous works, but which are here confirmed, generalized and highlighted.
  • 58 further research on this issue is welcome.
  • Second, although the authors only discuss local deterministic indeterminacy and cycles, they may be able to construct stochastic sunspot cycles along indeterminacy and bifurcations 56Some recent works confirm the importance of labor market imperfections in explaining real business cycles data.
  • If the authors estimate the relevant parameters of their general formulation, they will not be able to identify a particular source of specific distortions among those, which belonging to the same class, are observationally equivalent.

6.3 Local stability properties

  • The authors main interest is to understand how the existence of market imperfections change the characterization of local stability properties in terms of the elasticity of substitution between capital and labor, σ, and of the elasticity of the private offer curve, εγ, while keeping s and θ constant at values satisfying Assumption 1.1.
  • Most of the distortions considered in the literature satisfy this condition.

6.4.1 Derivation of Proposition 1

  • And the half-line ∆1, that starts on (AC) and points upwards to the left, crosses (AB) above point B. See Figure 4. 61This last case does not appear if σH2 does not exist.
  • With the help of geometrical arguments the authors can see that when σH2 > s−βLL 1+αLL exists, then σH2 > σH3. 69 However σH2 may be higher or lower than σF .
  • To simplify the exposition the authors only present in Table 2 the results for this configuration assuming that σH2 > σF . 70 Configuration (vi) (S1 ∈ (SD, 1)) 71 Define σS2 as the critical value of σ such that the half line ∆ goes through point A.72.
  • All these results are summarized in Table 2.

6.8 Existence of σH2

  • To discuss the existence and uniqueness of σH2 , the authors consider first the configurations where S1 ∈ (0, 1), and then the remaining ones.
  • Note that the equation ǫγH = ǫγT is a polynomial of degree 2, i.e. has at most two solutions.
  • Note that in this particular case, ǫγT does not depend on σ.

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Citations
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Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 2017
TL;DR: In this paper, the stabilization role of consumption taxes under a balanced budget rule in the presence of consumption externalities of the "keeping up with the Joneses" type is discussed.
Abstract: We discuss the stabilization role of consumption taxes under a balanced-budget rule in the presence of consumption externalities of the “keeping up with the Joneses” type. We consider a finance constrained economy and depart from a situation where sufficiently strong externalities make the steady state indeterminate, if government intervention is absent. Sufficiently procyclical consumption tax rates are able to ensure local saddle path stability. However, this procyclicality leads to the appearance of another steady state with lower levels of output which is a source or indeterminate. Therefore, government intervention with stabilization purposes may not be successful.

2 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a législation en vigueur en France has been proposed to interdict reproduction ou représentation of cet article, notamment par photocopie, n'est autorisée que dans les limites des conditions générales d'utilisation du site ou, le cas échéant, des conditions of la licence souscrite par votre établissement.
Abstract: La reproduction ou représentation de cet article, notamment par photocopie, n'est autorisée que dans les limites des conditions générales d'utilisation du site ou, le cas échéant, des conditions générales de la licence souscrite par votre établissement. Toute autre reproduction ou représentation, en tout ou partie, sous quelque forme et de quelque manière que ce soit, est interdite sauf accord préalable et écrit de l'éditeur, en dehors des cas prévus par la législation en vigueur en France. Il est précisé que son stockage dans une base de données est également interdit.

1 citations

References
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss implications of heterogencity for macroeconomic modeling: a one-sector macroeconomic model that ignores heterogeneity may sometimes require firm level parameters, but at other times the model may require the “biased” aggregate parameters.
Abstract: A typical (roughly) two‐digit industry in the United States appears to have constant or slightly decreasing returns to scale. Three puzzles emerge, however. First, estimates often rise at higher levels of aggregation. Second, apparent decreasing returns contradicts evidence of only small economic profits. Third, estimates with value added differ substantially from those with gross output. A representative‐firm paradigm cannot explain these puzzles, but a simple story of aggregation over heterogeneous units can. Theory and evidence on aggregation invalidate the common use of demand‐side instruments. Finally, we discuss implications of heterogencity for macroeconomic modeling: A one‐sector macroeconomic model that ignores heterogeneity may sometimes require firm‐level parameters, but at other times the model may require the “biased” aggregate parameters.

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a method for computing tax rates using national accounts and revenue statistics. And they constructed time series of tax rates for large industrial countries, identifying the revenue raised by different taxes at the general government level and defining aggregate measures of the corresponding tax bases.

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate properties of the one-sector growth model with increasing returns under two organizational structures capable of reconciling the existence of aggregate increasing returns with competitive behavior by firms.

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a simple method to help researchers develop quantitative models of economic fluctuations based on the insight that many models are equivalent to a prototype growth model with time-varying wedges which resemble productivity, labor and investment taxes, and government consumption.
Abstract: We propose a simple method to help researchers develop quantitative models of economic fluctuations. The method rests on the insight that many models are equivalent to a prototype growth model with time-varying wedges which resemble productivity, labor and investment taxes, and government consumption. Wedges corresponding to these variables–efficiency, labor, investment, and government consumption wedges–are measured and then fed back into the model in order to assess the fraction of variousfluctuations they account for. Applying this method to U.S. data for the Great Depression and the 1982 recession reveals that the efficiency and labor wedges together account for essentially all of the fluctuations; the investment wedge plays a decidedly tertiary role, and the government consumption wedge, none. Analyses of the entire postwar period and alternative model specifications support these results. Models with frictions manifested primarily as investment wedges are thus not promising for the study of business cycles.

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the implications for optimal portfolio decisions and equilibrium asset prices of the hypothesis that agents care about other agents' consumption level (in addition to their own) in two settings: a one-period CAPM model and a multi-period asset pricing model.
Abstract: The author studies the implications for optimal portfolio decisions and equilibrium asset prices of the hypothesis that agents care about other agents' consumption level (in addition to their own). That hypothesis is introduced in two settings: (1) a one-period CAPM model and (2) a multiperiod asset pricing model. The presence of externalities is shown to affect the optimal risky share, as well as the size of adjustments in the latter in response to exogenous changes in the risk-adjusted equity premium. In equilibrium, the equity premium is also affected by the sign and the intensity of the externalities. Copyright 1994 by Ohio State University Press.

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Frequently Asked Questions (14)
Q1. What have the authors contributed in "Market distortions and local indeterminacy: a general approach" ?

The authors provide a general methodology to study the role of market distortions on local indeterminacy and bifurcations. 

Empirical analysis on this issue is therefore an important direction for further research. 56 A possible explanation for these results may be linked to the fact that future expectations, which open the room for fluctuations driven by selffulfilling expectations, only affect the current decisions of consumers/workers, thus rendering distortions that affect the intertemporal trade-off of consumers/workers more important than those affecting the capital accumulation equation. Although some works have already considered some of these aspects,58 further research on this issue is welcome. Second, although the authors only discuss local deterministic indeterminacy and cycles, they may be able to construct stochastic sunspot cycles along indeterminacy and bifurcations 56Some recent works confirm the importance of labor market imperfections in explaining real business cycles data. 

the occurrence of indeterminacy and bifurcations in their framework is due to the existence of market distortions, mainly through their effects on αi,j, which are more relevant than βi,j when inputs are not weak substitutes in production. 

Market distortions play a role on the local stability properties of the steady state because they modify the elasticities of three crucial functions that characterize their two dimensional equilibrium dynamic system: the real interest rate, the real wage or equivalently effective consumption per unit of labor, and the generalized offer curve. 

In configurations (ii).1 and (iii).1 indeterminacy emerges for σ > σH1 = s−(1−s−ψ)(η−µ)−θ(1−s)(1+µ)ψ(η−µ) , provided εγis sufficiently small. 

By loglinearizing the system (3)-(4) around the normalized steady state,we obtain the local dynamics for K̂t = (Kt −K) /K and L̂t+1 = (Lt+1 − L) /L given by following equations:[ K̂t L̂t+1 ] = [ (1 + θε̺,K) θε̺,L ǫΓ,K−εΩ,K(1+θε̺,K)1+εΩ,LεΓ,L−θεΩ,Kε̺,L 1+εΩ,L ][ K̂t−1 L̂t ] ≡ [J ] [ Kt−1−K K Lt−L L ](6) Market distortions influence the local dynamics of the model, relatively to the perfectly competititive case, by modifying the elasticities εΩ,i, ε̺,i and εΓ,i. 

Although their methodology can be applied to any dynamic general equilibrium model, the dynamic framework considered in this paper is based on the perfectly competitive one sector model of a segmented asset economy of Woodford (1986) and Grandmont et al. (1998). 

Note also that bifurcations are quite relevant in explaining persistency of business fluctuations, since they appear when at least one eigenvalue crosses the unit circle. 

In the first example presented the authors consider a perfectly competitive economy where public expenditures, financed by variable taxation under a balanced budget rule, are introduced. 

In what follows, the authors denote by εX,y the elasticity, evaluated at the steady state, of the function X = {̺,Ω,Γ} with respect to the argument y = {K,L}, while εγ − 1 0 is the inverse of the elasticity of labor supply of the representative worker with respect to labor, s ∈ (0, 1) the elasticity of the production function with respect to capital, and σ > 0 is the elasticity of capital-labor substitution of the representative firm, all evaluated at the private level and at the steady state. 

As seen above, indeterminacy is possible in the presence of arbitrarily small distortions affecting either effective consumption or the offer curve. 

On the contrary, under labor market distortions (unions, efficiency wages, unemployment benefits, externalities in preferences), indeterminacy and bifurcations emerge for empirically plausible distortions. 

A perfect foresight intertemporal equilibrium of the economy with market distortions is a sequence (Kt−1, Lt) ∈ R 2 ++, t = 1, 2, ...,∞, that for a given K0 > 0 satisfies:Kt = β [1− δ + ̺t]Kt−1 (3)(1/B)Ωt+1Lt+1 = Γt (4)where ̺t ≡ A̺(Kt−1, Lt), Ωt ≡ AΩ(Kt−1, Lt) and Γt ≡ Γ(Kt−1, Lt). 

The first example is based on Dufourt et al. (2008), where the Woodford finance constrained framework is extended to take into account the existence of involuntary unemployment (see also Lloyd-Braga and Modesto (2007)). 

Trending Questions (1)
How to calculate labror market distortion?

The paper does not provide a specific method for calculating labor market distortions.