« Back to Results

Household Heterogeneity and Macroeconomic Outcomes

Paper Session

Sunday, Jan. 7, 2024 1:00 PM - 3:00 PM (CST)

Grand Hyatt, Lone Star Ballroom Salon A
Hosted By: American Economic Association & Committee on the Status of Women in the Economics Profession
  • Chair: Eva Janssens, Federal Reserve Board

Conventional Monetary Policies for Unconventional Times: Tracking Monetary Policy Bounds Using Microheterogeneity

Samya Aboutajdine
,
Princeton University
Borui Zhu
,
Harvard University

Abstract

Motivated by the inflation surge experienced during 2021-2023 and the subsequent trial and error of tightened monetary policy, we construct a DSGE model with producer-supplier contracting frictions. This model sheds light on the upper bound of interest rates preventing excessive tightening from leading to a recession. Similar to the concept of a reversal interest rate proposed by Abadi, Brunnermeier, and Koby (2022) that establishes the effective lower bound on expansionary monetary policy, our upper bound complements the Taylor rule by considering firm dynamics at the micro-level.

Specifically, our model includes a final good sector engaged in one-period contracting regarding the price and quantity of goods supplied by monopolistic suppliers. As the final good sector is unable to observe its suppliers' productivity, moral hazard prevents efficient renegotiation when an unexpected productivity shock affects a portion of the suppliers.

Due to the risk of failed renegotiation and the high cost of meeting contractual obligations, firms may find it optimal to declare bankruptcy and exit the market, depending on updated valuation by the shareholders. A tightened monetary policy aimed at price stabilization following a supply shock impacts the shareholders' investment trade-off by altering opportunity costs and firm valuations, potentially leading to increased firm exits and amplification of supply shocks. The distribution of firms plays a key role in quantitatively determining the central bank's leeway in stabilizing prices without compromising welfare compared to laissez-faire conditions.

On the Effects of Monetary Policy Shocks on Earnings and Consumption Heterogeneity

Minsu Chang
,
Georgetown University
Frank Schorfheide
,
University of Pennsylvania

Abstract

Abstract: In this paper we use the functional vector autoregression (VAR) framework of Chang, Chen, and Schorfheide (2021) to study the effects of monetary policy shocks (conventional and informational) on the cross-sectional distribution of earnings and consumption. We find that an expansionary monetary policy shock reduces earnings inequality. The reduction is generated by what we call the employment channel. In the left tail of the earnings distribution, the expansion lifts individuals out of unemployment and thereby reduces the earnings dispersion. For consumption we obtain the opposite result: the expansionary policy shock raises the mass in the right tail of the consumption distribution, thereby increasing consumption inequality.

From Trend to Cycle: the Changing Careers of Married Women and Business Cycle Risk

Katerine Ellieroth
,
Colby College
Amanda Michaud
,
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis

Abstract

As married women’s labor force participation has increased in the United States, the cyclical volatility of their employment has also increased. We provide a unified theory that can reconcile these facts. Lower volatility of married women’s employment over the business cycle is driven by counter-cyclical motives to remain in the labor force to provide insurance against their spouse’s income risk. Changes in fundamentals that increase attachment subsequently lower the ability of wives to adjust labor supply to provide insurance in recessions – they are more likely to have permanently high labor supply anyway. The model predicts that some forces driving the growth in female participation– increasing returns to tenure and decreasing fixed cost of work– increase attachment and cyclical volatility. The closing gender wage gap, by contrast, reduces both. A quantitative evaluation predicts that the former two forces have dominated in the United States with some ebbing for recent cohorts. Microeconomic evidence supports both this prediction and the specific mechanism of precautionary spousal insurance. Implications for welfare and intra-household insurance are discussed.

Portfolio Driven Household Attention

Shihan Xie
,
University of Illinois-Urbana-Champaign
Hie Joo Ahn
,
Federal Reserve Board

Abstract

This paper investigates the effect of households' asset holdings on their attention to macroeconomic news. Households' attentiveness is measured with the accuracy of their inflation expectations and perceived past inflation. We also construct new individual-level indicators of attentiveness and attitude using the microdata of the Michigan survey. With the battery of measures, we establish novel empirical regularities. Stockholders’ inflation forecasts and backcasts are more accurate than those of non-holders. Stockholders disagree less about future inflation and recent past inflation than non-holders. Stockholders adjust their economic outlook to macroeconomic shocks in a more responsive manner than non-holders do. The empirical evidence suggests that stock-market participation endogenously determines households' attentiveness to macroeconomic news. Stockholders have an incentive to monitor stock markets closely and frequently to detect the optimal timing of trading stocks given frequent changes in stock prices but relatively low transaction costs. Additionally, households hedge the risk of stock holdings by paying attention to news on stock markets and macroeconomy. Our findings suggest that monetary policy may be transmitted more through stockholders than non-holders and may increase wealth inequality between the two groups.

Discussant(s)
Bence Bardóczy
,
Federal Reserve Board
Eva Janssens
,
Federal Reserve Board
Sara Casella
,
University of Pennsylvania
Yeji Sung
,
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
JEL Classifications
  • E5 - Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit