Student Faculty Macro Lunch: "Is Structural Change Weakening Investment's Transmission of Monetary Policy?"

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Submitted by Brandon Eltiste on January 27, 2021
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Online
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Tuesday, March 9, 2021 - 12:00
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Jacob Weber, UC Berkeley, Department of Economics

Abstract: "We argue that secular change in both the production and composition of investment goods has weakened private investment's role in the transmission of monetary policy to labor earnings and consumption. We show analytically that fluctuations in the production of investment goods amplify the response of consumption to monetary policy shocks by varying labor income for hand-to-mouth agents. We document three secular changes that weaken this channel: (i) labor's share of value added in investment goods production has declined, (ii) the import share of investment goods has risen, and (iii) the composition of investment has shifted towards components that are less responsive to monetary policy. A small open economy, two agent New Keynesian model calibrated to match these facts implies a 38% and 26% weaker response of labor income and aggregate consumption, respectively, to real interest rate shocks in a 2010's economy relative to a 1960's economy."