Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
967334 Journal of Monetary Economics 2007 20 Pages PDF
Abstract
A positive technology shock may lead to a rise or a fall in per capita hours, depending on how hours enter the empirical VAR model. We provide evidence that, independent of how hours enter the VAR, a positive technology shock leads to a weak response in nominal wage inflation, a modest decline in price inflation, and a modest rise in the real wage in the short-run and a permanent rise in the long-run. We then examine the ability of several competing theories to account for this VAR evidence. Our preferred model features sticky prices, sticky nominal wages, and habit formation. The same model also does well in accounting for the labor market evidence in the post-Volcker period.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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