Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-gb8f7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T16:06:46.823Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

WELFARE GAINS FROM STABILIZATION IN A STOCHASTICALLY GROWING ECONOMY WITH IDIOSYNCRATIC SHOCKS AND FLEXIBLE LABOR SUPPLY

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 July 2005

STEPHEN J. TURNOVSKY
Affiliation:
University of Washington
MARCELO BIANCONI
Affiliation:
Tufts University

Abstract

Stochastic models with economywide shocks imply that the welfare costs of aggregate volatility are negligible. Empirical evidence suggests that the volatility of idiosyncratic shocks is several times that of aggregate shocks. This paper introduces both types of shocks. We find that if in the process of eliminating aggregate risk the policymaker can reduce idiosyncratic risk by an amount suggested by available empirical evidence, the welfare gains from stabilization can become significant. The introduction of idiosyncratic risk has important implications for asset pricing, and in particular may reduce the risk-free rate substantially, through the precautionary savings motive. Many of our results are sensitive both to the degree of risk aversion and to the flexibility of labor supply. The paper highlights the trade-offs involved in analyzing the effects of risk on growth and welfare and on asset pricing, clarifying the need to examine these issues within a unified stochastic general equilibrium framework.

Type
ARTICLES
Copyright
© 2005 Cambridge University Press

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Altissimo F. and P. Zaffaroni 2003 Towards Understanding the Relationship Between Aggregate Fluctuations and Individual Heterogeneity. Working paper, European Central Bank and Banca D'Italia.
Alvarez and Jermann 2000 Using Asset Prices to Measure the Costs of Business Cycles. Working Paper, 797, NBER.
Angeletos G. and L. Calvet 2001 Incomplete Markets, Growth and Business Cycles. Working paper, Harvard University and MIT.
Arrow K.J. 1962 The economic implications of learning by doing. Review of Economic Studies 29, 155173.Google Scholar
Atkeson A. and C. Phelan 1994 Reconsidering the costs of business cycles with incomplete markets. NBER Macroeconomics Annual 9, 187206.Google Scholar
Barlevy G. 2000 Evaluating the Costs of Business Cycles in Models of Endogenous Growth. Manuscript, Northwestern University.
Basak S. 1999 On the fluctuations in consumption and market returns in the presence of labor and human capital: An equilibrium analysis. Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 23, 10291064.Google Scholar
Beaudry P. and C. Pages 2001 The costs of business cycles and the stabilization value of unemployment insurance. European Economic Review 45, 15451572.Google Scholar
Bianconi M. 2001 Heterogeneity, efficiency and asset allocation with endogenous labor supply: The static case. Manchester School 69, 253268.Google Scholar
Bodie Z., R.C. Merton, and W.F. Samuelson 1992 Labor supply flexibility and portfolio choice in a life cycle model. Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 16, 427449.Google Scholar
Caballé J. and M. Santos 1993 On endogenous growth with physical and human capital. Journal of Political Economy 101, 245273.Google Scholar
Campbell J.Y. 1999 Asset prices, consumption and the business cycle. In J. Taylor and M. Woodford (eds.), Handbook of Macroeconomics, vol. 1C. Amsterdam: North-Holland.
Carroll C. 2000 Requiem for the representative consumer? Aggregate implications of microeconomic consumption behavior. American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings 90, 110115.Google Scholar
Carroll C. and M. Kimball 1996 On the concavity of the consumption function. Econometrica 64, 981992.Google Scholar
Carroll C. and A. Samwick 1997 The nature of precautionary wealth. Journal of Monetary Economics 40, 4171.Google Scholar
Chatterjee S. and D. Corbae 2002 On the Welfare Gains of Reducing the Likelihood of Economic Crises. Working paper, University of Pittsburgh.
Clark K., D. Leslie, and E. Symons 1994 The costs of recession. Economic Journal 104, 2036.Google Scholar
Constantinides G. 2002 Rational asset prices. Journal of Finance 62, 15671591.Google Scholar
Constantinides G. and D. Duffie 1996 Asset pricing with heterogeneous consumers. Journal of Political Economy 104, 219240.Google Scholar
Constantinides G., J.B. Donaldson, and R. Mehra 2002 Junior can't borrow: A new perspective on the equity premium puzzle. Quarterly Journal of Economics 117, 269296.Google Scholar
Cooley T.F. (ed.) 1995 Frontiers of Business Cycle Research. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Corsetti G. 1997 A portfolio approach to endogenous growth: Equilibrium and optimal policy. Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 21, 16271644.Google Scholar
Danthine J.P. and J.B. Donaldson 1993 Methodological and empirical issues in real business cycle theory. European Economic Review 37, 135.Google Scholar
Deaton A. and C. Paxson 1994 Intertemporal choice and inequality. Journal of Political Economy 102, 437467.Google Scholar
Epstein L. and S. Zin 1990 “First-order” risk aversion and the equity premium puzzle. Journal of Monetary Economics 26, 387407.Google Scholar
Gali J. 1994 Government size and macroeconomic stability. European Economic Review 38, 117132.Google Scholar
Gavin M. and R. Hausmann 1995 Overcoming volatility in Latin America. Inter-American Development report.
Gourinchas P.-O. 2000 Precautionary Saving, Life Cycle and Macroeconomics. Working paper, Princeton University.
Grinols E. and S.J. Turnovsky 1998 Risk, optimal government finance and monetary policies in a growing economy. Economica 65, 401428.Google Scholar
Hansen G. and R. Wright 1992 The labor market in real business cycle theory. Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Quarterly Review 1, 212.Google Scholar
Heaton J. and D. Lucas 1992 The effects of incomplete insurance markets and trading costs in a consumption-based asset pricing model. Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 16, 601620.Google Scholar
İmrohoro[gcaron]lu A. 1989 Cost of business cycles with indivisibilities and liquidity constraints. Journal of Political Economy 97, 13641383.Google Scholar
Just R.E. and R.D. Pope 1978 Stochastic specification of production functions and economic implications. Journal of Econometrics 7, 6786.Google Scholar
Kandel S. and R.F. Stambaugh 1991 Asset returns and intertemporal preferences. Journal of Monetary Economics 27, 3971.Google Scholar
Kormendi R. and P.G. Meguire 1985 Macroeconomic determinants of growth: Cross-country evidence. Journal of Monetary Economics 16, 141163.Google Scholar
Krebs T. 2003 Growth and welfare effects of business cycles in economies with idiosyncratic human capital risk. Review of Economic Dynamics 6, 846868.Google Scholar
Krebs T. and B. Wilson 2004 Asset returns in an endogenous growth model with incomplete markets. Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 28, 817839.Google Scholar
Krusell P. and A. Smith 1999 On the welfare effects of eliminating business cycles. Review of Economic Dynamics 2, 245272.Google Scholar
Krusell P. and A. Smith 2002 Revisiting the Welfare Effects of Eliminating Business Cycles. Working Paper, Carnegie Mellon University.
Lucas D. 1994 Asset pricing with undiversifiable income risk and short sales constraints: Deepening the equity premium puzzle. Journal of Monetary Economics 34, 325358.Google Scholar
Lucas R.E. 1987 Models of Business Cycles. New York: Basil Blackwell.
Lucas R.E. 2003 Macroeconomic priorities. American Economic Review 93, 114.Google Scholar
Meghir C. and L. Pistaferri 2004 Income risk dynamics and heterogeneity. Econometrica 72, 132.Google Scholar
Mehra R. and E. Prescott 1985 The equity premium: A puzzle. Journal of Monetary Economics 15, 145161.Google Scholar
Merton R. 1969 Lifetime portfolio selection under uncertainty: The continuous time case. Review of Economics and Statistics 51, 247257.Google Scholar
Obstfeld M. 1994 Risk-taking, global diversification, and growth. American Economic Review 84, 13101329.Google Scholar
Pischke J.-S. 1995 Individual income, incomplete information and aggregate consumption. Econometrica 63, 805840.Google Scholar
Ramey G. and V. Ramey 1995 Cross-country evidence on the link between volatility and growth. American Economic Review 85, 11381151.Google Scholar
Romer P. 1986 Increasing returns and long-run growth. Journal of Political Economy 94, 10021037.Google Scholar
Saito M. 1998 A simple model of incomplete insurance: The case of permanent shocks. Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 22, 763778.Google Scholar
Storesletten K., C. Telmar, and A. Yaron 2001 The welfare cost of business cycles revisited: Finite lives and cyclical variation in idiosyncratic risk. European Economic Review 45, 13111339.Google Scholar
Storesletten K., C. Telmar, and A. Yaron 2004 Cyclical dynamics in idiosyncratic labor market risk. Journal of Political Economy 112, 695717.Google Scholar
Turnovsky S.J. 2000 Government policy in a stochastic growth model with elastic labor supply. Journal of Public Economic Theory 2, 389433.Google Scholar
Weil P. 1989 The equity premium puzzle and the risk–free rate puzzle. Journal of Monetary Economics 24, 401421.Google Scholar
White H. 1980 A heteroskedastic-consistent covariance matrix and a direct test for heteroskedasticity. Econometrica 48, 817838.Google Scholar