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Foreign Shocks in an Estimated Multi-Sector Model

Bergholt, Drago
Working paper
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Working_CAMP_4-2014.pdf (2.107Mb)
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http://hdl.handle.net/11250/223211
Utgivelsesdato
2014
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  • Centre for Applied Macro- and Petroleum economics (CAMP) [104]
Sammendrag
How are macroeconomic fluctuations in open economies affected by international

business cycles? To shed some light on this question, I develop and estimate

a medium scale DSGE model for a small open economy. The model incorporates

i) international markets for firm-to-firm trade in production inputs, and ii) producer

heterogeneity where technology and price setting constraints vary across industries.

Using Bayesian techniques on Canadian and US data, I document several macroeconomic regularities in the small open economy, all attributed to international disturbances. First, foreign shocks are crucial for domestic fluctuations at all forecasting

horizons. Second, productivity is the most important driver of business cycles.

Investment efficiency shocks on the other hand have counterfactual implications for

international spillover. Third, the relevance of foreign shocks accumulates over time.

Fourth, business cycles display strong co-movement across countries, even though

shocks are uncorrelated and the trade balance is countercyclical. Fifth, exchange

rate pass-through to aggregate CPI inflation is moderate, while pass-through at the

sector level is positively linked to the frequency of price changes. Few of these features

have been accounted for in existing open economy DSGE literature, but all are

consistent with reduced form evidence. The model presented here offers a structural

interpretation of the results.
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Handelshøyskolen BI
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CAMP Working Paper Series;4/2014

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