Presented by The Department of Economics at the University of Tulsa and SEA
Where: Room 1065 Tyrrell Hall at the University of Tulsa
January 25 @ 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm
Professor Santetti’s research empirically assesses predictions of the economist Richard Goodwin’s model of cyclical growth regarding demand and distributive regimes when integrating the real and financial sectors.
Professor Santetti evaluates how financial and employment shocks affect the labor market and monetary policy variables over six different U.S. business-cycle peaks. It identifies a parsimonious Time-Varying Vector Autoregressive model with Stochastic Volatility (TVP-VAR-SV) with the labor share of income, the employment rate, residential investment, and the interest rate spread as endogenous variables.
Using Bayesian inference methods, key results suggest (i) a combination of profit-led demand and profit-squeeze distribution; (ii) weakening of these regimes during the Great Moderation; and (iii) significant connections between the standard Goodwinian variables and residential investment as well as term spreads. The findings presented here broadly conform to the transition to increasingly deregulated financial and labor markets initiated in the 1980s.
Paper link: 2310.05153.pdf (arxiv.org)