Household Decisions, Credit Markets and the Macroeconomy: Implications for the Design of Central Bank Models
60 Pages Posted: 5 May 2010
Date Written: March 2010
Abstract
It is widely acknowledged that the recent generation of DSGE models failed to incorporate many of the liquidity and financial accelerator mechanisms revealed in the global financial crisis that began in 2007. This paper complements the papers presented at the 2009 BIS annual conference focused on the role of banks and other financial institutions by analysing the role of household decisions and their interplay with credit conditions and asset prices in the light of empirical evidence. In DSGE models without financial frictions, asset prices are merely a proxy for income growth expectations and play no separate role. On UK aggregate consumption evidence, section 2 of the paper shows this is strongly contradicted by the data, for all possible discount rates and both for a perfect foresight and an empirical rational expectations approach to measuring income expectations. However, an Ando-Modigliani consumption function generalised to include a role for liquidity, uncertainty, time varying credit conditions, wealth and housing collateral effects, as well as income expectations, explains the data well. Section 3 reports new evidence on the striking rejection on aggregate data of the consumption Euler equation central to all DSGE models. Section 4 shows that UK micro evidence is consistent with the generalised Ando-Modigliani model. Section 5 discusses the limitations of recent DSGE models with financial frictions and housing. Section 6 discusses some business cycle implications of amplification mechanisms and non-linearities operating via households and residential construction. It reconsiders econometric methodology appropriate for designing better evidence-based central bank policy models. See also, http://ssrn.com/abstract=1699600.
Keywords: Household decisions, housing markets, wealth, business cycle models, consumption
JEL Classification: C32, E44, E21, E32, G21
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Central Bank Institutional Structure and Effective Central Banking: Cross Country Empirical Evidence
By Iftekhar Hasan and Loretta J. Mester
-
Conflicts and Financial Collapse: The Problem of Secondary-Management Agency Costs
-
Asia-Pacific Perspectives on the Financial Crisis 2007-2010
By Jonathan A. Batten, Warren P. Hogan, ...
-
The 2008-2009 Financial Crisis: Risk Model Transparency and Incentives
By Terry Marsh and Paul C. Pfleiderer
-
Valuing Illiquid Equity Securities in Light of the Financial Crisis of 2007-2009
By Niso Abuaf