Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-t5tsf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-13T03:20:24.419Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A NOTE ON MONOTONE COMPARATIVE STATICS FOR MONETARY DIRECTED SEARCH MODELS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 September 2019

Michael Choi*
Affiliation:
University of California-Irvine
*
Address correspondence to: Michael Choi, Department of Economics, University of California-Irvine, 3151 Social Science Plaza, Irvine, CA 92697-5100, USA. e-mail: michael.yfchoi@uci.edu.

Abstract

This note uses monotone methods to derive two sets of comparative statics results for monetary directed search models. First, it characterizes the impact of a higher inflation rate or a higher cost of using credit on market outcomes, regardless of the choice of matching function. Second, the seller-to-buyer ratio, output level, and money demand increase as the matching function becomes more efficient in a log-supermodular sense. I also consider an extension with endogenous search intensity and show that search intensity and trade volume always decrease in the nominal interest rate.

Type
Note
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2019

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.)

Footnotes

I thank Guillaume Rocheteau and Randall Wright for many useful comments. All errors are my own.

References

REFERENCES

Amir, R. (2005) Supermodularity and complementarity in economics: An elementary survey. Southern Economic Journal 71(3), 636660.Google Scholar
Bethune, Z., Choi, M. and Wright, R. (2019) Frictional Goods Markets: Theory and Applications. Forthcoming Review of Economic Studies.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burdett, K., Shi, S. and Wright, R. (2001) Pricing and matching with frictions. Journal of Political Economy 109(5), 10601085.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dong, M. (2010) Inflation and variety. International Economic Review 51(2), 401420.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dong, M. (2011) Inflation and unemployment in competitive search equilibrium. Macroeconomic Dynamics 15(S2), 252268.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dutu, R., Huangfu, S. and Julien, B. (2011) Contingent prices and money. International Economic Review 52(4), 12911308.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Faig, M. and Jerez, B. (2006) Inflation, prices, and information in competitive search. BE Journal of Macroeconomics 6(1), 134.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gonzalez, F. and Shi, S. (2010) An equilibrium theory of learning, search, and wages. Econometrica 78(2), 509537.Google Scholar
Guerrieri, V., Shimer, R. and Wright, R. (2010) Adverse selection in competitive search equilibrium. Econometrica 78(6), 18231862.Google Scholar
Huangfu, S. (2007) Competitive search equilibrium with private information on monetary shocks. BE Journal of Macroeconomics 9(1), 127.Google Scholar
Lagos, R. and Rocheteau, G. (2005) Inflation, output, and welfare. International Economic Review 46(2), 495522.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lagos, R., Rocheteau, G. and Wright, R. (2017) Liquidity: A new monetarist perspective. Journal of Economic Literature 55(2), 371440.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, Y. and Rocheteau, G. (2010) On the threat of counterfeiting. Macroeconomic Dynamics 15(S1), 1041.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liu, L. Q., Wang, L. and Wright, R. (2011) On the “hot potato” effect of inflation: Intensive versus extensive margins. Macroeconomic Dynamics 15(S2), 191216.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lucas, R. E. and Nicolini, J. P. (2015) On the stability of money demand. Journal of Monetary Economics 73, 4865.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martellini, P. and Menzio, G. (2018) Declining search frictions, unemployment and growth. Technical report, National Bureau of Economic Research.Google Scholar
Menzio, G., Shi, S. and Sun, H. (2013) A monetary theory with non-degenerate distributions. Journal of Economic Theory 148(6), 22662312.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Milgrom, P. and Shannon, C. (1994) Monotone comparative statics. Econometrica 62(1), 157180.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moen, E. (1997) Competitive search equilibrium. Journal of Political Economy 105(2), 385411.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Montgomery, J. (1991) Equilibrium wage dispersion and interindustry wage differentials. Quarterly Journal of Economics 106(1), 163179.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nosal, E. (2011) Search, welfare, and the “hot potato” effect of inflation. Macroeconomic Dynamics 15(S2), 313326.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Quah, J. K.-H. (2007) The comparative statics of constrained optimization problems. Econometrica 75(2), 401431.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rocheteau, G. and Wright, R. (2005) Money in search equilibrium, in competitive equilibrium, and in competitive search equilibrium. Econometrica 73(1), 175202.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rocheteau, G., Wright, R. and Xiao, S. X. (2018) Open market operations. Journal of Monetary Economics 98, 114128.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vives, X. (1990) Nash equilibrium with strategic complementarities. Journal of Mathematical Economics 19(3), 305321.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vives, X. (2001) Oligopoly Pricing: Old Ideas and New Tools. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Wang, L., Wright, R. and Liu, L. Q. (2016) Money and Credit: Theory and Applications. Working paper.Google Scholar
Wright, R., Kircher, P., Julien, B. and Guerrieri, V. (2017). Directed Search: A Guided Tour. NBER Working paprer.CrossRefGoogle Scholar