Essays in International Macroeconomics

dc.contributor.advisor

Uribe, Martin

dc.contributor.advisor

Kimbrough, Kent P

dc.contributor.advisor

Burnside, A Craig

dc.contributor.advisor

Schmitt-Grohe, Stephanie

dc.contributor.author

Liu, Xuan

dc.date.accessioned

2007-05-10T16:01:33Z

dc.date.available

2007-05-10T16:01:33Z

dc.date.issued

2007-05-10T16:01:33Z

dc.department

Economics

dc.description.abstract

This dissertation consists of two essays in international macroeconomics. The first essay shows that optimal fiscal and monetary policy is time consistent in a standard small open economy. Further, there exist many maturity structures of public debt capable of rendering the optimal policy time consistent. This result is in sharp contrast with that obtained in the context of closed-economy models. In the closed economy, the time consistency of optimal monetary and fiscal policy imposes severe restrictions on public debt in the form of a unique term structure of public debt that governments can leave to their successors at each point in time. The time consistent result is robust: optimal policy is time consistent when both real and nominal bonds have finite horizons. While in a closed economy, governments must have both nominal and real bonds, and have at least real bonds over an infinite horizon to render optimal policy time consistent. The second essay uses a dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model to theoretically rationalize the empirical finding that sudden stops have weaker effects on outputs when the small open economy is more open to trade. First, welfare costs of sudden stops are decreasing in trade openness. The reason is that when the economy is more open to trade, the economy will have less volatile capital, which leads to less volatile output. In terms of welfare, when the small open economy is more open to trade, the welfare costs of sudden stops will be smaller. Second, sudden stops may be welfare improving to the small open economy. This is because when the representative household is a net borrower in the international capital market, its consumption will be negatively correlated with country spread. Since utility is a concave function of consumption, it must be a convex function of country spread. That is, when the country spread is more volatile, the mean utility is higher. The two findings are robust: they hold with one sector economy model, and two sector economy models with homogenous capital and heterogenous capital. In addition, this paper shows that a counter-cyclical tariff rate policy is not welfare-improving.

dc.format.extent

657714 bytes

dc.format.mimetype

application/pdf

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/210

dc.language.iso

en_US

dc.rights.uri

http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/

dc.subject

Business cycles

dc.subject

Welfare

dc.subject

Time Consistency

dc.subject

Optimal Fiscal and Monetary Policy

dc.title

Essays in International Macroeconomics

dc.type

Dissertation

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
D_Liu_Xuan_a_052007.pdf
Size:
642.3 KB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format

Collections