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The U.S. economy shows a contrasting difference in cyclical properties between low- and high-income groups. Income shares of the bottom three income quintiles are procyclical; while those of the next 35 percent are countercyclical. However, the income share of the very top five percent income...
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This paper investigates the quantitative implications of real wage rigidities and heterogeneity for two long-lasting puzzles in the business cycles literature: the low correlation between total hours worked and labor productivity and the large volatility of the labor wedge, defined as a gap...
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It is well-known that real wages are procyclical conditional on a monetary policy shock. This paper challenges this conventional view by using a quantitative heterogeneous-agent New Keynesian economy with sticky wages. In the model with benchmark calibration, the wage rate per effective unit of...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10014091478
This study investigates the welfare effects of business cycle fluctuations from distributional perspectives. To this end, we develop a quantitative heterogeneous-agent model which incorporates market incompleteness and non-convexity into the mapping from the time devoted to work to labor...
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