Heterogeneity in Price Stickiness and the Real Effects of Monetary Shocks
Recipient of the Arrow Prize in Macroeconomics
A BEJM Frontiers article.
Abstract
There is ample evidence that the frequency of price adjustments differs substantially across sectors. This paper introduces sectoral heterogeneity in price stickiness into an otherwise standard sticky price model to study how it affects the dynamics of monetary economies. Qualitative and quantitative results from a realistic calibration for the U.S. economy show that monetary shocks tend to have larger and more persistent real effects in heterogeneous economies, when compared to identical-firms economies with similar degrees of nominal and real rigidity. In the presence of strategic complementarities in price setting, sectors with lower frequencies of price adjustment have a disproportionate effect on the aggregate price level. In order to better approximate the dynamics of the calibrated heterogeneous economy, an identical-firms model requires a frequency of price changes that is up to three times lower than the average of the heterogeneous economy.Submitted: May 1, 2005 · Accepted: December 13, 2006 · Published: December 20, 2006
Originally published in Frontiers of Macroeconomics.
Recommended Citation
Carvalho, Carlos
(2006)
"Heterogeneity in Price Stickiness and the Real Effects of Monetary Shocks,"
Frontiers of Macroeconomics:
Vol. 2
:
Iss.
1, Article 1.
Available at: http://www.bepress.com/bejm/frontiers/vol2/iss1/art1
