Saturday, February 8, 2025
From a paper by Xiaoke Zhu, and Xiaohua Yu:
“This study aims to investigate whether and how food inflation influences U.S. macroeconomic dynamics. To this end, we develop and estimate a heterogeneous dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) model incorporating both the food and non-food sectors. Calibration and Bayesian estimation methods are employed to derive the key parameters involved in this model. Our analysis reveals that key macroeconomic variables exhibit significant nonlinear responses to food price shocks. Notably, a quarter of headline inflation can be attributed to food inflation in the post-pandemic era. Furthermore, a higher labor substitution parameter and lower consumption substitution elasticity amplify the economic recession. In response to food price shocks, moderate monetary policies can mitigate declines in real GDP and consumption but potentially exacerbate inflation.”
Posted by 8:02 PM
atLabels: Energy & Climate Change
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