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Monetary Policy and Heterogeneity: An Analytical Framework

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Abstract THANK is a tractable heterogeneous-agent New-Keynesian model that captures analytically core micro-heterogeneity channels of quantitative-HANK: cyclical inequality and risk; self-insurance, precautionary saving, and realistic intertemporal marginal propensities to consume. I use it to elucidate key transmission mechanisms and dynamic properties of HANK models. Countercyclical inequality yields aggregate-demand amplification and makes determinacy with Taylor rules more stringent; but solving the forward guidance puzzle requires procyclical inequality: a Catch-22. Solutions include combining inequality with a distinct risk channel, with compensating cyclicalities; I provide evidence that disposable income inequality was procyclical in the last two, Great and COVID recessions, while risk is countercyclical. Alternative policy rules also solve the Catch-22, e.g. price-level-targeting or, in the model version with liquidity, setting nominal public debt. Optimal policy with heterogeneity features a novel inequality-stabilization motive generating higher inflation volatility—but is unaffected by risk, insofar as the target efficient equilibrium entails no inequality.

Description

Acknowledgements: I am grateful for comments to the Editor, Kurt Mitman and three anonymous referees, as well as in particular to Adrien Auclert, Edouard Challe, Keshav Dogra, Gauti Eggertsson, and Marcus Hagedorn, and to Sushant Acharya, Christian Bayer, Anmol Bhandari, Davide Debortoli, Marco Del Negro, Axelle Ferrière, Jordi Galí, Marc Giannoni, Jonathan Heathcote, Diego K änzig, Keith Kuester, Eric Leeper, Olivier Loisel, Karel Mertens, Christina Patterson, Fabrizio Perri, Xavier Ragot, Vincent Sterk, Ludwig Straub, Paolo Surico, Andrea Tambalotti, Gianluca Violante, Mirko Wiederholt, and Michael Woodford, and a great many other colleagues and seminar and conference participants. I gratefully acknowledge without implicating the support of Banque de France Chair at PSE, the Institut Universitaire de France, HEC Lausanne, and of the Janeway Institute and Keynes Fund at Cambridge, as well as the hospitality of New York University and CREi.

Journal Title

The Review of Economic Studies

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0034-6527
1467-937X

Volume Title

92

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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