Economics 751

Macroeconomic Theory II: part 2

Spring 2008

 

Lectures: Monday and Wednesday, 10 AM-11.50 AM (see exact schedule below)

Location: Seminar room 429

Professor Matteo Iacoviello
Administration Building
, Room 470
Tel: 552-3689
E-mail: iacoviel@bc.edu
Web page: http://fmwww.bc.edu/ec/iacoviello.php

TA: Alessandro Barattieri [barattie@bc.edu]

Review Sessions: Tuesday, 4 pm (see exact schedule below)

 

Office Hours: Tuesday 12.30 PM – 1.30 PM and by appointment

The final exam will be on THURSDAY MAY 8, 9 AM

 

 

Course Description, Course Materials, Course Requirements, Reading List, Additional Information

 

 

Course Description

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This course is part of the first year graduate sequence in Macroeconomic Theory. We will cover modern neo-keynesian theories of business cycle fluctuations. We will begin by analyzing what the data say on the interaction between monetary factors and the business cycle. We will then develop and analyze several models of the interaction between money and the business cycle.

Among the topics that we will cover:  

Evidence on money, prices, interest rates and output

Money in models without nominal rigidities

Credit and business cycle

Dynamic-Neo Keynesian theories of the business cycle

Discretionary Policy and Time Inconsistency

 

 

Course Materials

No single textbook covers the material. I will make copies of my lecture notes available. A textbook which I loosely follow is:

Walsh, Carl E., 2003: Monetary Theory and Policy, Cambridge: MIT Press.

Other useful textbooks which might be useful for some parts of the course are:

Obstfeld, Maurice, and Kenneth Rogoff, 1997, Foundations of International Macroeconomics, MIT Press 

Hamilton, James D. 1994, Time Series Analysis, Princeton University Press

 

Course Requirements

Evaluation of this course will be based on homeworks (30%) and on a final exam (70%)

We will make extensive use of dynamic general equilibrium models. You will have to learn how to use computer codes that solve stochastic systems of difference equations.

 

 

weekday

DAY

CLASS

DUTIES and REVIEW

Problem sets are here

1

Wednesday

March 12

DSGE models

 

2

Monday

March 17

DSGE models

 

3

Wednesday

March 19

VAR

 

 

 

 

 

Matlab tutorial on March 25 (TUE)

Matlab tutorial file

4

Wednesday

March 26

VAR

 

5

Monday

March 31

Sidrauski

 

 

 

 

 

Problem Set 1 (VAR) due on Tuesday April 1

Discussion on April 1st (TUE)

Matlab file with data

6

Wednesday

April 2

Sidrauski

 

 

 

 

 

 

7

Monday

April 7

Credit cycles

 

 

 

 

 

Problem Set 2 (Sidrauski) due on Tuesday April 8

Discussion on April 8 (TUE)

8

Wednesday

April 9

Credit cycles

 

 

 

 

 

Problem Set 3 (Credit cycles) due on Tuesday April 15

Discussion on April 15 (TUE)

9

Monday

April 14

New-Keynesian

 

 

 

 

 

 

10

Wednesday

April 16

New-Keynesian

 

 

 

 

 

Homework A (Credit cycles) due on Friday April 18

Discussion on April 22 (TUE)

11

Wednesday

April 23

New-Keynesian

 

 

 

 

 

Problem Set 4 (DNK) due on Friday April 25

Discussion on April 25 (FRI)

12

Monday

April 28

Time inconsistency

 

13

Wednesday

April 30

Time inconsistency

Homework B (DNK) due Tuesday April 29

Problem Set 5 due on Friday May 2

Discussion on May 2 (FRI)


 

Reading List (* denotes required reading)

 

DSGE Models

* Uhlig, Harald (1995), “A toolkit for analyzing nonlinear economic dynamic models easily”, material available at http://www2.wiwi.hu-berlin.de/institute/wpol/html/toolkit.htm

 

VARs and Evidence on money and output

Note: For this part, I suggest you to read the paper by Stock and Watson to get some background, and then you can read Hamilton's chapter to get the technical details straight away. If (as I expect) you realize that Hamilton is too tough for you to handle (you will see that it contains lots of stuff that we did not go through), you can begin by reading Enders, chapter 5, which is much easier. The Stock and Watson paper is on the web, whereas you can find the two books in the BC library. The other two references (Christiano et al and Walsh) are useful if you want to deepen your understanding of the empirical literature, but I will not expect you to read them thoroughly.

Christiano, Lawrence, Martin Eichembaum and Charles Evans (2000), "Monetary Policy Shocks: what have we Learned and to what End?'', in J.Taylor and M.Woodford (eds.), Handbook of Macroeconomics

* Stock, James, and Mark Watson (2001), “Vector Autoregressions”, Journal of Economic Perspectives, 15(4).

Walsh, chapter 1

* Enders, Walter (1995), RATS Handbook for Applied Econometric Time Series, Chapter 5

* Hamilton, chapter 10 (sections 10.1 and 10.2) and Chapter 11

 

Money in models without nominal rigidities

For this part, the best reference is Walsh, Chapter 2.  Chapter 8 of Obstfeld and Rogoff is also worth reading: in Sections 8.1 to 8.3 of that chapter you will recognize many of the things we went through

* Walsh, Chapter 2

* Obstfeld and Rogoff, Chapter 8

 

Credit and Business Cycles

For this part, the best reference is the credit cycles paper by Kiyotaki and Moore (1997).  Chapter 7 of Walsh (especially 7.3.2) is great as a background reading.  

* Kiyotaki, Nobuhiro and John Moore (1997).  "Credit Cycles."  Journal of Political Economy, 211-248. 

* Walsh, Chapter 7

Kiyotaki, Nobuhiro (1998) “Credit and Business Cycles,” Japanese Economic Review, 18-35

 

 

Models with imperfect competition and nominal rigidities

For this part, besides the class notes, you have to read at least the papers by Gali (2002), Gertler, and Chapter 5 in Walsh.

* Gali, Jordi (2002), "New Perspectives on Monetary Policy, Inflation, and the Business Cycle"," NBER WP 8767, February 2002.

* Gertler, Mark (2003), Lecture Notes on sticky price models

* Walsh (2003, new edition), Chapter 5

* Gali, Jordi, and Mark Gertler, “Macroeconomic Modeling for Monetary Policy Evaluation,” Journal of Economic Perspectives, vol. 21, no. 4, fall 2007, pp. 25-45.

Clarida, Richard, Jordi Galí, and Mark Gertler (2000): "Monetary Policy Rules and Macroeconomic Stability: Evidence and Some Theory," Quarterly Journal of Economics 115: 147-180

Goodfriend, Marvin, and Robert King (1997), “The New Neoclassical Synthesis and the Role of Monetary Policy”, NBER Macro Annual

 

 

Discretionary Policy and Time Inconsistency

For this part, besides the class notes, you have to read Chapter 8 in Walsh and Section 9.5 of Obstfeld-Rogoff. The papers in the Macro Annual by Nancy Stokey and the comments by Peter Ireland and Lars Svensson are also worth reading.

* Walsh (2003, new edition), Chapter 8

* Obstfeld and Rogoff, Chapter 9, section 5

* Stokey, Nancy, (2002), “Rules Versus Discretion after Twenty-Five Years,” NBER Macro Annual

* Svensson, Lars (2002) "Comments on Nancy Stokey, 'Rules and Discretion' after Twenty-Five Years," 17th Annual Conference on Macroeconomics, NBER

* Ireland, Peter (2002) "Comments on Nancy Stokey, 'Rules and Discretion' after Twenty-Five Years," 17th Annual Conference on Macroeconomics, NBER

 

 

 

 

Additional Information

To be posted

 

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