New Evidence on Balanced Growth, Stochastic Trends, and Economic Fluctations
Karl Whelan ()
No 7/RT/04, Research Technical Papers from Central Bank of Ireland
Abstract:
The one-sector Solow-Ramsey model informs how most modern researchers characterize macroeconomic trends and cycles, and evidence supporting the model’s balanced growth predictions is often cited. This paper shows, however, that the inclusion of recent data leads to the balanced growth predictions being rejected. An alternative balanced growth hypothesis-that the ratio of nominal consumption to nominal investment is stationery-is put forward, and new measures of the stochastic trends and cycles in aggregate US data are derived based on this hypothesis. The contrasting behaviour of real and nominal ratios is consistent with a two-sector model of economic growth, with separate production technologies for consumption and investment and two stochastic trends underlying the long-run behaviour of all macroeconomic series. Empirical estimates of these stochastic trends are presented based on a structural VAR and the role played in the business cycle by shocks to these trends is discussed.
Pages: 42 pages
Date: 2004-10
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (9)
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https://centralbank.ie/docs/default-source/publica ... whelan).pdf?sfvrsn=4 (application/pdf)
Related works:
Working Paper: New Evidence on Balanced Growth, Stochastic Trends, and Economic Fluctuations (2006) 
Working Paper: New evidence on balanced growth, stochastic trends, and economic fluctuations (2004) 
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