Working
Paper 98-1
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
Revised article published in American Economic Review
90, no. 3 (June 2000): 367-90.
In earlier work (Fuhrer 1996), I document what I view
as the failure of standard models of representative
consumer and firm behavior to replicate the dynamics
that we observe in the aggregate data. In essence, these
models fail because they imply that both inflation and
real variables must jump in response to
monetary policy (and other) shocks, in contrast to identified
VAR evidence that shows a gradual, hump-shaped
response. This paper discusses a rigorous empirical
standard for monetary policy models. The motivation
for this discussion is that, if one wishes to conduct
welfare analysis, one must be reasonably confident that
the model provides a good approximation to underlying
consumer and firm behavior over the monetary policy
horizon, i.e., in the short-run. The paper examines
a specific alternative to the standard consumption model
in which consumers' utility depends in part on current
consumption relative to past consumption. This formulation
of habit formation allows one to nest habit formation,
life-cycle consumption, and Campbell and Mankiw's rule-of-thumb
consumers within a more general model. The empirical
tests developed in the paper show that one can reject
the hypothesis of no habit formation with tremendous
confidence. This result suggests that models that are
unable to produce a hump-shaped response will be strongly
rejected empirically.
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