Learning and the Great Moderation

42 Pages Posted: 8 Sep 2009

See all articles by James Bullard

James Bullard

Federal Reserve Banks - Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Aarti Singh

The University of Sydney - School of Economics

Multiple version iconThere are 2 versions of this paper

Date Written: August 2009

Abstract

We study a stylized theory of the volatility reduction in the U.S. after 1984 - the Great Moderation - which attributes part of the stabilization to less volatile shocks and another part to more difficult inference on the part of Bayesian households attempting to learn the latent state of the economy. We use a standard equilibrium business cycle model with technology following an unobserved regime-switching process. After 1984, according to Kim and Nelson (1999a), the variance of U.S. macroeconomic aggregates declined because boom and recession regimes moved closer together, keeping conditional variance unchanged. In our model this makes the signal extraction problem more difficult for Bayesian households, and in response they moderate their behavior, reinforcing the effect of the less volatile stochastic technology and contributing an extra measure of moderation to the economy. We construct example economies in which this learning effect accounts for about 30 percent of a volatility reduction of the magnitude observed in the postwar U.S. data.

Keywords: Bayesian learning, business cycles, information, regime-switching

JEL Classification: D8, E3

Suggested Citation

Bullard, James and Singh, Aarti, Learning and the Great Moderation (August 2009). CEPR Discussion Paper No. DP7401, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1469880

James Bullard (Contact Author)

Federal Reserve Banks - Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis ( email )

P.O. Box 442
411 Locust Street
St. Louis, MO 63166
United States
314-444-8576 (Phone)

Aarti Singh

The University of Sydney - School of Economics ( email )

Rm 370 Merewether (H04)
The University of Sydney
Sydney, NSW 2006 2008
Australia

HOME PAGE: http://sydney.edu.au/arts/economics/staff/academic/aarti_singh.shtml

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