Date&Time |
Monday, October 22, 2018, 3:30pm-5:00pm |
Place |
Seminar Room at RIEB (Kanematsu Memorial Hall, 1st Floor) |
Intended Audience |
Faculties, Graduate Students and People with Equivalent Knowledge |
Language |
Japanese |
3:30pm-5:00pm
Speaker |
Ryo JINNAI |
Affiliation |
Institute of
Economic
Research,
Hitotsubashi
University |
Topic |
Recurrent Bubbles and Economic Growth |
Abstract |
We propose a model that generates permanent effects on economic growth following a recession (super hysteresis). Recurrent bubbles are introduced to an otherwise standard infinite-horizon business-cycle model with liquidity scarcity and endogenous productivity. In our setup, bubbles promote growth because they provide liquidity to constrained investors. Bubbles are sustained only when the financial system is under-developed. If the financial development is in an intermediate stage, recurrent bubbles can be harmful in the sense that they decrease the unconditional mean and increase the unconditional volatility of the growth rate relative to the fundamental equilibrium in the same economy.
Through the lens of an estimated version of our model fitted to U.S. data, we argue that 1) there is evidence of recurrent bubbles; 2) the Great Moderation results from the collapse of the monetary bubble in the late 1970s; and 3) the burst of the housing bubble is partially responsible for the post-Great Recession dismal recovery of the U.S. economy.
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