An Equilibrium Model of the Business Cycle With Household Production and Fiscal Policy

From MaRDI portal
Publication:4368657

DOI10.21034/sr.191zbMath0889.90034OpenAlexW3123452642MaRDI QIDQ4368657

Randall Wright, Richard Rogerson, Ellen R. McGrattan

Publication date: 4 December 1997

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.21034/sr.191




Related Items

Household borrowing constraints and residential investment dynamicsHome production and small open economy business cyclesHOW DIFFERENT IS THE CYCLICAL BEHAVIOR OF HOME PRODUCTION ACROSS COUNTRIES?CONSUMPTION AND TIME USE OVER THE LIFE CYCLETime allocation and home production technologyGreat recession, slow recovery and muted fiscal policies in the USBy force of demand: explaining cyclical fluctuations of international trade and government spendingHome productivityFrictional capital reallocation. I: Ex ante heterogeneityLabor and investment frictions in a real business cycle modelTaxation and market work: is Scandinavia an outlier?Maximum likelihood inference in weakly identified dynamic stochastic general equilibrium modelsHOUSING DYNAMICS OVER THE BUSINESS CYCLEOptimal tax rules in a dynamic stochastic economy with capitalA method for taking models to the dataTechnology shocks and aggregate fluctuations in an estimated hybrid RBC modelSpecialization and efficiency with labor-market matchingExplaining cross-country differences in participation rates and aggregate fluctuationsMARRIAGE, MARKETS, AND MONEY: A COASIAN THEORY OF HOUSEHOLD FORMATION“WHY NOT SETTLE DOWN ALREADY?” A QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF THE DELAY IN MARRIAGEElectoral uncertainty, fiscal policy and macroeconomic fluctuationsSectoral shocks and home substitutionWhat do `residuals' from first-order conditions reveal about DGE models?Estimating the rational expectations model of speculative storage: a Monte Carlo comparison of three simulation estimatorsSECTORAL CHANGES AND THE INCREASE IN WOMEN'S LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATIONOptimal taxation of capital income with imperfectly competitive product marketsTechnology shocks and the business cycle: On empirical investigationConsumption and hours in the United States and Europe