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Learning Asymmetries in Real Business Cycles

401

Citations

33

References

2003

Year

Abstract

When a boom ends, the downturn is generally sharp and short. When growth resumes, the\nboom is more gradual. Our explanation rests on learning about productivity. When agents\nbelieve productivity is high, they work, invest, and produce more. More production generates higher precision information. When the boom ends, precise estimates of the slowdown prompt decisive reactions: Investment and labor fall sharply. When growth resumes, low production yields noisy estimates of recovery. Noise impedes learning, slows recovery, and makes booms\nmore gradual than downturns. A calibrated model generates growth rate asymmetry similar to macroeconomic aggregates. Fluctuations in agents' forecast precision match observed counter cyclical errors of forecasters.

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