Reference-dependent Preferences and the Transmission of Monetary Policy

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Standard

Reference-dependent Preferences and the Transmission of Monetary Policy. / Gaffeo, Edoardo ; Petrella, Ivan ; Pfajfar, Damjan ; Santoro, Emiliano.

Tilburg University, Center for Economic Research, 2010.

Research output: Working paperResearch

Harvard

Gaffeo, E, Petrella, I, Pfajfar, D & Santoro, E 2010 'Reference-dependent Preferences and the Transmission of Monetary Policy' Tilburg University, Center for Economic Research. <http://arno.uvt.nl/show.cgi?fid=113039>

APA

Gaffeo, E., Petrella, I., Pfajfar, D., & Santoro, E. (2010). Reference-dependent Preferences and the Transmission of Monetary Policy. Tilburg University, Center for Economic Research. http://arno.uvt.nl/show.cgi?fid=113039

Vancouver

Gaffeo E, Petrella I, Pfajfar D, Santoro E. Reference-dependent Preferences and the Transmission of Monetary Policy. Tilburg University, Center for Economic Research. 2010.

Author

Gaffeo, Edoardo ; Petrella, Ivan ; Pfajfar, Damjan ; Santoro, Emiliano. / Reference-dependent Preferences and the Transmission of Monetary Policy. Tilburg University, Center for Economic Research, 2010.

Bibtex

@techreport{95562e6cf48c4551b4da1ec66688d673,
title = "Reference-dependent Preferences and the Transmission of Monetary Policy",
abstract = "This paper proposes a novel explanation of the vast empirical evidence showing that output and prices react asymmetrically to monetary policy innovations over contractions and expansions in the business cycle. We use VAR techniques to show that monetary policy exerts stronger effects on the U.S. GDP during contractionary phases, as compared to expansionary ones. As to prices, their response is not statistically different across different cyclical stages. We show that these facts are consistent with a New Neoclassical Synthesis model based on the assumption that households' utility partly depends on deviations of their consumption from a reference level below which aversion to loss is displayed. In line with the theory developed by Kahneman and Tversky (1979), losses in consumption utility loom larger than gains. This implies state-dependent degrees of real rigidity and elasticity of intertemporal substitution in consumption that generate competing effects on the responses of output and inflation following a monetary innovation. The key predictions of the model are in line with the data. We then explore the state-dependent trade-off between inflation and output stabilization that naturally arises in this context. Greater elasticity of inflation to real activity during expansionary stages of the cycle promotes a stronger degree of policy activism in the response to the expected rate of inflation under discretion, compared to what is otherwise prescribed during contractions.",
author = "Edoardo Gaffeo and Ivan Petrella and Damjan Pfajfar and Emiliano Santoro",
note = "JEL classification: E32, E52, D03, D1",
year = "2010",
language = "English",
publisher = "Tilburg University, Center for Economic Research",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Tilburg University, Center for Economic Research",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Reference-dependent Preferences and the Transmission of Monetary Policy

AU - Gaffeo, Edoardo

AU - Petrella, Ivan

AU - Pfajfar, Damjan

AU - Santoro, Emiliano

N1 - JEL classification: E32, E52, D03, D1

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - This paper proposes a novel explanation of the vast empirical evidence showing that output and prices react asymmetrically to monetary policy innovations over contractions and expansions in the business cycle. We use VAR techniques to show that monetary policy exerts stronger effects on the U.S. GDP during contractionary phases, as compared to expansionary ones. As to prices, their response is not statistically different across different cyclical stages. We show that these facts are consistent with a New Neoclassical Synthesis model based on the assumption that households' utility partly depends on deviations of their consumption from a reference level below which aversion to loss is displayed. In line with the theory developed by Kahneman and Tversky (1979), losses in consumption utility loom larger than gains. This implies state-dependent degrees of real rigidity and elasticity of intertemporal substitution in consumption that generate competing effects on the responses of output and inflation following a monetary innovation. The key predictions of the model are in line with the data. We then explore the state-dependent trade-off between inflation and output stabilization that naturally arises in this context. Greater elasticity of inflation to real activity during expansionary stages of the cycle promotes a stronger degree of policy activism in the response to the expected rate of inflation under discretion, compared to what is otherwise prescribed during contractions.

AB - This paper proposes a novel explanation of the vast empirical evidence showing that output and prices react asymmetrically to monetary policy innovations over contractions and expansions in the business cycle. We use VAR techniques to show that monetary policy exerts stronger effects on the U.S. GDP during contractionary phases, as compared to expansionary ones. As to prices, their response is not statistically different across different cyclical stages. We show that these facts are consistent with a New Neoclassical Synthesis model based on the assumption that households' utility partly depends on deviations of their consumption from a reference level below which aversion to loss is displayed. In line with the theory developed by Kahneman and Tversky (1979), losses in consumption utility loom larger than gains. This implies state-dependent degrees of real rigidity and elasticity of intertemporal substitution in consumption that generate competing effects on the responses of output and inflation following a monetary innovation. The key predictions of the model are in line with the data. We then explore the state-dependent trade-off between inflation and output stabilization that naturally arises in this context. Greater elasticity of inflation to real activity during expansionary stages of the cycle promotes a stronger degree of policy activism in the response to the expected rate of inflation under discretion, compared to what is otherwise prescribed during contractions.

M3 - Working paper

BT - Reference-dependent Preferences and the Transmission of Monetary Policy

PB - Tilburg University, Center for Economic Research

ER -

ID: 33602943