A New Keynesian Model with Robots: Implications for Business Cycles and Monetary Policy

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Publicat a:Atlantic Economic Journal vol. 47, no. 1 (Mar 2019), p. 81
Autor principal: Tsu-ting, Tim Lin
Altres autors: Weise, Charles L
Publicat:
Springer Nature B.V.
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Accés en línia:Citation/Abstract
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100 1 |a Tsu-ting, Tim Lin  |u Gettysburg College, Gettysburg, PA, USA 
245 1 |a A New Keynesian Model with Robots: Implications for Business Cycles and Monetary Policy 
260 |b Springer Nature B.V.  |c Mar 2019 
513 |a Journal Article 
520 3 |a This paper examines the effects of labor-replacing capital, referred to as robots, on business cycle dynamics using a New Keynesian model with a role for both traditional and robot capital. This study finds that shocks to the price of robots have effects on wages, output, and employment that are distinct from shocks to the price of traditional capital. Further, the inclusion of robots alters the response of employment and labor’s share to total factor productivity and monetary policy shocks. The presence of robots also weakens the correlation between human labor and output and the correlation between human labor and labor’s share. The paper finds that monetary policymakers would need to place a greater emphasis on output stabilization if their objective is to minimize a weighted average of output and inflation volatility. Moreover, if policymakers have an employment stabilization objective apart from their output stabilization objective, they would have to further focus on output stabilization due to the deterioration of the output-employment correlation. 
653 |a Prices 
653 |a Monetary policy 
653 |a Employment 
653 |a Robots 
653 |a Business cycles 
653 |a Productivity 
653 |a Inflation 
653 |a Robotics 
653 |a Stabilization 
653 |a Policy making 
653 |a Deterioration 
653 |a Labor 
653 |a Keynesian theory 
653 |a Economic models 
653 |a Wages & salaries 
653 |a Models 
653 |a Objectives 
700 1 |a Weise, Charles L  |u Gettysburg College, Gettysburg, PA, USA 
773 0 |t Atlantic Economic Journal  |g vol. 47, no. 1 (Mar 2019), p. 81 
786 0 |d ProQuest  |t ABI/INFORM Global 
856 4 1 |3 Citation/Abstract  |u https://www.proquest.com/docview/2209102185/abstract/embedded/L8HZQI7Z43R0LA5T?source=fedsrch 
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