Industrial Structure, Menu Costs and the Non-Neutrality of Money

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Standard

Industrial Structure, Menu Costs and the Non-Neutrality of Money. / Dixon, Huw David; Hansen, Claus Thustrup.

Centre for Economic Policy Research, 1997.

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Harvard

Dixon, HD & Hansen, CT 1997 'Industrial Structure, Menu Costs and the Non-Neutrality of Money' Centre for Economic Policy Research.

APA

Dixon, H. D., & Hansen, C. T. (1997). Industrial Structure, Menu Costs and the Non-Neutrality of Money. Centre for Economic Policy Research.

Vancouver

Dixon HD, Hansen CT. Industrial Structure, Menu Costs and the Non-Neutrality of Money. Centre for Economic Policy Research. 1997.

Author

Dixon, Huw David ; Hansen, Claus Thustrup. / Industrial Structure, Menu Costs and the Non-Neutrality of Money. Centre for Economic Policy Research, 1997.

Bibtex

@techreport{6f566f4074c011dbbee902004c4f4f50,
title = "Industrial Structure, Menu Costs and the Non-Neutrality of Money",
abstract = "New Keynesian literature assumes symmetric industrial structure when analysing explanations of monetary non-neutrality. We analyse the impact of modifying this assumption by allowing for a mixed industrial structure; some industries are characterized by monopolistic competition, and others by perfect competition. The mixed industrial structure implies that there is a misallocation of the input (labour) between sectors. Following a 5% monetary expansion, the menu costs required for price rigidity in the monopolistic sector can be 50 times smaller than in the symmetric case, while the ratio of welfare gain to private loss can be as large as 200 times the corresponding symmetric case. This implies that in real world economies, menu costs may be even more significant than previously thought",
author = "Dixon, {Huw David} and Hansen, {Claus Thustrup}",
note = "JEL Classification: D40, E30, L16",
year = "1997",
language = "English",
publisher = "Centre for Economic Policy Research",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Centre for Economic Policy Research",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Industrial Structure, Menu Costs and the Non-Neutrality of Money

AU - Dixon, Huw David

AU - Hansen, Claus Thustrup

N1 - JEL Classification: D40, E30, L16

PY - 1997

Y1 - 1997

N2 - New Keynesian literature assumes symmetric industrial structure when analysing explanations of monetary non-neutrality. We analyse the impact of modifying this assumption by allowing for a mixed industrial structure; some industries are characterized by monopolistic competition, and others by perfect competition. The mixed industrial structure implies that there is a misallocation of the input (labour) between sectors. Following a 5% monetary expansion, the menu costs required for price rigidity in the monopolistic sector can be 50 times smaller than in the symmetric case, while the ratio of welfare gain to private loss can be as large as 200 times the corresponding symmetric case. This implies that in real world economies, menu costs may be even more significant than previously thought

AB - New Keynesian literature assumes symmetric industrial structure when analysing explanations of monetary non-neutrality. We analyse the impact of modifying this assumption by allowing for a mixed industrial structure; some industries are characterized by monopolistic competition, and others by perfect competition. The mixed industrial structure implies that there is a misallocation of the input (labour) between sectors. Following a 5% monetary expansion, the menu costs required for price rigidity in the monopolistic sector can be 50 times smaller than in the symmetric case, while the ratio of welfare gain to private loss can be as large as 200 times the corresponding symmetric case. This implies that in real world economies, menu costs may be even more significant than previously thought

M3 - Working paper

BT - Industrial Structure, Menu Costs and the Non-Neutrality of Money

PB - Centre for Economic Policy Research

ER -

ID: 45681