Abstract

Abstract A growing body of empirical evidence suggests that a positive technology shock leads to a temporary decline in employment. A two-country model is used to demonstrate that the open economy dimension can enhance the ability of sticky price models to account for the evidence. The reasoning is as follows. An improvement in technology appreciates the nominal exchange rate. Under producer-currency pricing, the exchange rate appreciation shifts global demand toward foreign goods away from domestic goods. This causes a temporary decline in domestic employment. If the expenditure-switching effect is sufficiently strong, a technology shock also has a negative effect on output in the short run.

Highlights

  • Gali (1999) examines the e¤ects of technology shocks on output and employment using a structural VAR approach in a seminal paper

  • I begin by examining the e¤ects of a domestic technology shock under full local-currency pricing (LCP) (b = 1)

  • This paper shows that the open economy dimension can enhance the abilwww.economics-ejournal.org ity of sticky price models to account for the empirical evidence

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Summary

Introduction

Gali (1999) examines the e¤ects of technology shocks on output and employment (hours worked) using a structural VAR approach in a seminal paper. There is an additional factor that can cause a decline in employment and output in the short run: the expenditureswitching e¤ect of a nominal exchange rate change. In the case of local-currency pricing (LCP), the appreciation carries no expenditure-switching e¤ect in the short run In this case, a technology shock causes a decline in employment almost identical to the closed economy case. In this respect the ...ndings of this paper are di¤erent to those of Corsetti and Pesenti (2005) who ...nd that exchange rate pass-through has no impact on employment, following a technology shock In this model, employment and output gradually increase after the initial response.

The Model
Country Size and Market Structure
Households
Price Setting
Symmetric Equilibrium
The International Transmission of Technology Shocks
Parameterisation
Simulation Results
Technology Shocks and Employment
Monetary Policy
Conclusions
Full Text
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