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Monetary policy in an estimated stochastic dynamic general equilibrium model of the euro area

TLDR
In this article, a stochastic dynamic general equilibrium (SDGE) model with sticky prices and wages for the euro area was developed and estimated using seven key macroeconomic variables: GDP, consumption, investment, prices, real wages, employment and the nominal interest rate.
Abstract
This paper, first, develops and estimates a stochastic dynamic general equilibrium (SDGE) model with sticky prices and wages for the euro area. The model incorporates various other features such as habit formation, costs of adjustment in capital accumulation and variable capacity utilisation and is estimated using seven key macro-economic variables: GDP, consumption, investment, prices, real wages, employment and the nominal interest rate. The introduction of eight orthogonal structural shocks (including productivity, labour supply, preference, cost-push and monetary policy shocks) allows for an empirical investigation of the effects of such shocks and of their contribution to business cycle fluctuations in the euro area. For example, it is found that productivity shocks account for only 10 percent of the long run variance in output. Using the estimated model, the paper then analyses the output (real interest rate) gap, defined as the difference between the actual and the flexible-price level of output (real interest rate). Finally, the estimated model is also used to analyse optimal monetary policy.

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House Prices, Borrowing Constraints, and Monetary Policy in the Business Cycle

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Bayesian Estimation of an Open Economy DSGE Model with Incomplete Pass-Through

TL;DR: This paper developed a dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) model for an open economy, and estimate it on Euro area data using Bayesian estimation techniques, incorporating several open economy features, as well as a number of nominal and real frictions that have proven important for the empirical fit of closed economy models.
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The Time-Varying Volatility of Macroeconomic Fluctuations

TL;DR: The authors investigated the sources of the important shifts in the volatility of US macroeconomic variables in the postwar period and proposed the esti- mation of DSGE models allowing for time variation in the variance of the structural innovations, and applied their estimation strategy to a large-scale model of the business cycle.
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Structural Vector Autoregressions: Theory of Identification and Algorithms for Inference

TL;DR: In this paper, rank conditions for structural vector autoregressions (SVARs) are defined and checked as a matrix-filling problem and applied to a wide class of identifying restrictions, including linear and certain nonlinear restrictions.
References
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Discretion versus policy rules in practice

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine how recent econometric policy evaluation research on monetary policy rules can be applied in a practical policymaking environment, and the discussion centers around a hypothetical but representative policy rule much like that advocated in recent research.
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Time to build and aggregate fluctuations

TL;DR: In this article, a general equilibrium model is developed and fitted to U.S. quarterly data for the post-war period, with the assumption that more than one time period is required for the construction of new productive capital and the non-time-separable utility function that admits greater intertemporal substitution of leisure.
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The Science of Monetary Policy: A New Keynesian Perspective

TL;DR: In this article, a review of the recent literature on monetary policy rules is presented, and the authors exposit the monetary policy design problem within a simple baseline theoretical framework and consider the implications of adding various real word complications.
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