Lecture 05
Lecture 05
Thomas Drechsel
University of Maryland
Spring 2022
recap from previous lecture
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this lecture
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references
I A good textbook reference for this lecture is the Ljungqvist and Sargent text book
Recursive Macroeconomic Theory (2nd edition), Chapters 16 and 17
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overview
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precautionary savings in partial equilibrium
why start in partial equilibrium?
I We want to build intuition for the basic decision margins of individual agents
I Recall Lucas tree model: take consumption patterns as given, price assets (GE)
I Here: take asset prices as given, study agents’ consumption behavior (PE)
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a simple pe setting
I Assume single household, endowment income, no uncertainty
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the permanent income hypothesis
I In this world, current income has no effect on consumption path, only lifetime
income (permanent income) does
I How to see this formally? Consolidate the budget constraint and impose no-Ponzi
condition:
Rbt = ct − yt + bt+1
ct+1 − yt+1 bt+2
Rbt = ct − yt + +
R R
...
∞
X ct+j − yt+j
Rbt =
Rj
j=0
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the permanent income hypothesis
I Suppose we have log utility and βR = 1 so that ct+1 = ct
I Current consumption depends only on lifetime income (asset wealth and all future
endowment income)
I Current income changes (that leave permanent income the same) do not change
consumption
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testing the pih empirically
I Macro data
I Hall (1978): assume quadratic utility ⇒ Et ct+1 = ct ; no current information (other
than current consumption) should predict future consumption; confirmed for
disposable income, rejected for stock prices
I Wilcox (1989): look at pre-announced increases in social security benefit; do not rise
consumption immediately, so PIH rejected; possible explanation: liquidity constraints
I Micro data
I Zeldes (1989a): tests for liquidity constraint explanation; PIH holds for “rich”
households
I Shea (1995): consider households with long-term union contracts; consumption
responds to predictable wage movements; responds asymetrically to
increase/decreases
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precautionary savings
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precautionary savings
u0 (ct ) = u0 (ct+1 )
u0 (c∗t ) = Et u0 (c∗t+1 )
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precautionary savings
Use result Et u0 (c∗t+1 ) > u0 Et c∗t+1
I
Substitute assumption Et c∗t+1 = ct+1 into the right hand side of the above
I
inequality
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incomplete markets models: a baseline setting
environment
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environment
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remarks
I Defining s and a over discrete spaces will be helpful when we take about solution
methods for these models further below
I Important note: in this setting, there are actual individual savings (no “illusion of
choice”) because there are incomplete markets and heterogeneity
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bellman equation of agent i
m
( )
X
k k ` 0 `
V (a, s ) = max
0
u(c) + β P(s , s )V (a , s )
c,a ∈A
`=1
subject to
c + a0 = (1 + r)a + sk w
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what’s the solution
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what’s the solution
a0 = ga (a, s)
c = gc (a, s)
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what’s the solution
a0 = ga (a, s)
c = gc (a, s)
I With a discrete state space, the policy functions are also transition matrices
I They are the same for each agent, because agents are ex-ante identical
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wealth-employment distribution
I In this economy, we can define the unconditional distribution of states for a given
agent recursively
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interpretation of stationary distribution
I The fraction of time that an infinitely lived agent spends in state (a, s)
I In the models we study below, the initial distribution of agents over individual
state variables (a, s) remains constant over time even though the state of the
individual household is a stochastic process
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introducing incomplete markets and heterogeneity
I I will run you through some specific models that build on the above framework
I In the future lectures, we will have more elaborate frictions and but will then
typically make the heterogeneity aspect simpler
I e.g. one saver and one borrower
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pure credit economy: Huggett (1993)
hugget environemnt
a > −φ
ws1
I Could be natural debt limit (φ = r ) or exogenous parameter that is more
restrictive (more on this later)
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competitive equilibrium
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computational solution algorithm
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adding capital: Aiyagari (1994)
environment: production economy
I Households:
∞
X
max β t u(ct )
t=0
subject to
ct + kt+1 = (rt + 1 − δ)kt + wt st
I Representative firm:
max AF (Kt , Nt ) − rt Kt − wt Nt
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environment: production economy
I Firm FOCs:
∂F
wt = A
∂Nt
∂F
rt = A
∂Kt
kt+1 = g(st , kt )
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competitive equilibrium
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computational solution algorithm
1. Guess a capital stock K j
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putting things together
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aggregate precautionary savings
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adding aggregate risk: Krusell and Smith (1998)
aggregate risk
I Since the distribution in a given period matters for prices, each agent will want to
know the entire distribution
I Insight of Krusell and Smith: can approximate distribution with a finite set of
moments (the mean)
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insights of krusell and smith
I Model with uninsurable idiosyncratic risk displays far less dispersion and skewness
in wealth than we see in US data
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the latest generation of heterogeneous agent
macro models
the world according to hank
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from micro to macro
I HANK models allow to study empirically realistic wealth and income distributions
I A key element is the marginal propensity to consume out of transitory income
(the PIH does not hold)
I Distributional features of the economy:
I Are an object of interest
I Matter meaningfully for aggregate dynamics
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from micro to macro
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a picture from a former umd student
I In this course, we focus in more detail on financial frictions and will typically have
relatively simple layers of heterogeneity
I Important building blocks of HANK models are related to what we study
I Different types of market incompleteness
I E.g. often multiple assets with different degrees of liquidity and different returns
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wrapping up
wrapping up
I From now on, we will start going deeper into the formulation of financial frictions,
and study how they matter for macroeconomic dynamics
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Bibliography
Aiyagari, S. R. (1994): “Uninsured idiosyncratic risk and aggregate saving,” The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 109, 659–684.
Auclert, A., M. Rognlie, and L. Straub (2020): “Micro jumps, macro humps: Monetary policy and business cycles in an estimated HANK
model,” Tech. rep., National Bureau of Economic Research.
Bayer, C., B. Born, and R. Luetticke (2020): “Shocks, frictions, and inequality in US business cycles,” .
Hall, R. E. (1978): “Stochastic Implications of the Life Cycle-Permanent Income Hypothesis: Theory and Evidence,” Journal of Political Economy,
86, 971–987.
Huggett, M. (1993): “The risk-free rate in heterogeneous-agent incomplete-insurance economies,” Journal of economic Dynamics and Control, 17,
953–969.
Kaplan, G., B. Moll, and G. L. Violante (2018): “Monetary policy according to HANK,” American Economic Review, 108, 697–743.
Krusell, P. and A. A. Smith, Jr (1998): “Income and wealth heterogeneity in the macroeconomy,” Journal of political Economy, 106, 867–896.
Lee, D. (2020): “Quantitative Easing and Inequality,” Job Market Paper.
Shea, J. (1995): “Union Contracts and the Life-Cycle/Permanent-Income Hypothesis,” The American Economic Review, 85, 186–200.
Wilcox, D. W. (1989): “Social security benefits, consumption expenditure, and the life cycle hypothesis,” Journal of Political Economy, 97,
288–304.
Zeldes, S. P. (1989a): “Consumption and Liquidity Constraints: An Empirical Investigation,” Journal of Political Economy, 97, 305–346.
——— (1989b): “Optimal Consumption with Stochastic Income: Deviations from Certainty Equivalence,” The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 104,
275–298.