Derived from
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21210234 Advanced Macroeconomics in Economics LM-56 GIULI FRANCESCO
(syllabus)
Part I: The first part of the course deal with the basic concepts needed to define and measure economic growth and the business cycle. To derive a set of short and long-term stylised facts, we will review essential notions about the trend-cycle decomposition of historical series, the filtering procedures and the theory of stochastic processes. Then, we will derive the neoclassical growth model (Solow model) and its micro-founded version with complete and perfectly competitive markets and perfect information (RamseyCass Koopmans). We will see that, in the long run, the trend component of the technological progress causes the growth of the real variables, whereas, in the short run, random components in the technological progress will trigger the cycle.
Part II: This second part of the course will focus on several extensions of the canonical RBC model. We will keep adding more and more elements to the model to bring the results of simulations closer to empirical evidence. The main extensions that we will see are the indivisible labour model, habit in consumption, variable capital utilization, capital and investment adjustment cost and preference shocks.
Part III: The third part of the course will focus on fiscal policy in the RBC models. In particular, on the effects of increases in public spending financed by either lump-sum or distortionary taxation and debt accumulation, emphasizing the theoretical foundations and the match with the empirical evidence.
Part IV: The last part will focus on monetary policy issues. We will see that the introduction of money in a Walrasian model implies results that are at odds with the empirical evidence. Then we will focus on the New-Keynesian approach, which shares the same methodological approach as the RBC theory. Still, the micro-foundation is based on monopolistic competitive markets and sticky prices. These two hypotheses make money non-neutral and give the monetary policy an active role. Furthermore, price stickiness also affects the responses to real shocks that differ, to some extent, from those obtained in the RBC model. In this way, we will see how it is possible to reproduce both the unconditional and the conditional evidence to the realization of both real and nominal shocks.
(reference books)
Teaching material: There is no single assigned textbook for the course. Instead, class lectures and handouts, drawn on my typed notes, will be available online. The teaching material is based on the following textbooks and scientific papers: Textbooks Gali, Jordi. Monetary Policy, Inflation, and the Business Cycle. Romer, David. Advanced Macroeconomics Walsh, Carl. Monetary Theory and Policy. Marchetti, Enrico. Teorie del Ciclo Economico
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