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A Near-Rational Model of the Business Cycle, with Wage and Price Inertia
879
Citations
4
References
1985
Year
Economic FluctuationDynamic EconomicsIndustrial OrganizationExternal ShockEconomic AnalysisBusiness ActivityMacroeconomic ModelReal Economic VariablesInertial Price-wage BehaviorEconomicsBusiness Cycle AnalysisFinanceNear-rational ModelMacroeconomicsWage InflationShock (Economics)BusinessEconometricsEconodynamicsPrice InertiaMicroeconomics
This paper presents a model in which insignificantly suboptimal behavior causes aggregate demand shocks to have significant real effects. The individual loss to agents with inertial price-wage behavior is second-order in terms of the parameter describing the shock, while the effect on real economic variables is first-order. Thus, significant changes in business activity can be generated by anticipated money supply changes provided that some agents are willing to engage in nonmaximizing behavior which results in small losses.
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