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Bayesian counterfactual analysis of the sources of the great moderation

Authors
Chang-Jin, KimMorley, JamesPiger, Jeremy
Issue Date
3월-2008
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
Counterfactual analysis; Bayesian Analysis; Great Moderation
Citation
JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECONOMETRICS, v.23, no.2, pp.173 - 191
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECONOMETRICS
Volume
23
Number
2
Start Page
173
End Page
191
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/123944
DOI
10.1002/jae.978
ISSN
0883-7252
Abstract
We use counterfactual experiments to investigate the sources of the large volatility reduction in US real GDP growth in the 1980s. Contrary to an existing literature that conducts counterfactual experiments based on classical estimation and point estimates, we consider Bayesian analysis that provides a straightforward measure of estimation uncertainty for the counterfactual quantity of interest. Using Blanchard and Quah's (1989) structural VAR model of output growth and the unemployment rate, we find strong statistical support for the idea that a counterfactual change in the size of structural shocks alone, with no corresponding change in the propagation of these shocks, would have produced the same overall volatility reduction as what actually occurred. Looking deeper, we find evidence that a counterfactual change in the size of aggregate supply shocks alone would have generated a larger volatility reduction than a counterfactual change in the size of aggregate demand shocks alone. We show that these results are consistent with a standard monetary VAR, for which counterfactual analysis also suggests the importance of shocks in generating the volatility reduction, but with the counterfactual change in monetary shocks alone generating a small reduction in volatility. Copyright (C) 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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