The Taylor Principle and (In-) Determinacy in a New Keynesian Model with hiring Frictions and Skill Loss


Autoria(s): Rannenberg, Ansgar
Data(s)

02/03/2012

02/03/2012

2009

Resumo

We introduce duration dependent skill decay among the unemployed into a New-Keynesian model with hiring frictions developed by Blanchard/Gali (2008). If the central bank responds only to (current, lagged or expected future) inflation and quarterly skill decay is above a threshold level, determinacy requires a coefficient on inflation smaller than one. The threshold level is plausible with little steady-state hiring and firing ("Continental European Calibration") but implausibly high in the opposite case ("American calibration"). Neither interest rate smoothing nor responding to the output gap helps to restore determinacy if skill decay exceeds the threshold level. However, a modest response to unemployment guarantees determinacy. Moreover, under indeterminacy, both an adverse sunspot shock and an adverse technology shock increase unemployment extremely persistently.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10943/86

Publicador

University of St Andrews

Relação

SIRE DISCUSSION PAPERS;SIRE-DP-2009-48

Palavras-Chave #monetary policy rules #Taylor principle #NAIRU #unemployment #hysteresis
Tipo

Working Paper