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Dive into the research topics where Jean-Guillaume Sahuc is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean-Guillaume Sahuc.


Economics Letters | 2006

Partial Indexation, Trend Inflation, and the Hybrid Phillips Curve

Jean-Guillaume Sahuc

This paper proposes a full description of the Calvo price-setting model based on partial prices indexation and studies the interaction between partial indexation and trend inflation. We show that using a hybrid version of the Phillips curve partly decreases the risks of overestimate due to the omission of trend inflation. We also provide new evidence on the fit of the hybrid Phillips curve for the Euro area and the United States over the period 1970-2002. The GMM-West estimates suggest that (i) a full indexation scheme is not data consistent whereas a partial indexation scheme allows a good fit and (ii) forgetting trend inflation induces overestimating by approximately 3-4 percent of the probability to not change the price, for reasonable values of trend inflation.


International Journal of Central Banking | 2006

Optimal Monetary Policy in an Estimated DSGE Model of the Euro Area with Cross-Country Heterogeneity

Eric Jondeau; Jean-Guillaume Sahuc

This paper investigates the implications of cross-country heterogeneity within the euro area for the design of optimal monetary policy. We build an optimizing-based multi-country model (MCM) describing the euro area in which differences between structural parameters across countries are allowed. Using Bayesian techniques, we estimate the MCM and its area-wide counterpart (AWM). We then question which model is the most appropriate for monetary policy purposes. Several results emerge. First, using an AWM induces relatively large and significant welfare losses. Second, this is not the use of a rule based on aggregated variables that is costly in terms of welfare, but rather the use of a sub-optimal forecasting model. Third, allowing for habit on consumption has important implications for the dynamics of models but taking into account difference in price indexation has more drastic effects on welfare losses.


Post-Print | 2007

Differences in Interest Rate Policy at the ECB and the Fed: An Investigation with a Medium-Scale DSGE Model

Frank Smets; Jean-Guillaume Sahuc

Using two estimated models for the euro area and the United States, this paper investigates whether the observed difference in the amplitude of the interest rate cycle since 1999 in both areas is due to differences in the estimated monetary policy reaction function, differences in the structure of the economy or differences in the size and nature of the shocks hitting both economies. The paper concludes that differences in the type, size and persistence of shocks in both areas can largely explain the different interest rate setting.


Applied Economics Letters | 2002

A 'Hybrid' Monetary Policy Model: Evidence from the Euro Area

Jean-Guillaume Sahuc

The New IS and Phillips curves state that output and inflation are purely forward-looking but this theory is conflicting with the empirical results. This note analyses how some augmented version of those curves, called hybrid IS and Phillips curves are more consistent with the data properties.


Journal of Applied Econometrics | 2016

In search of the transmission mechanism of fiscal policy in the Euro area

Patrick Fève; Jean-Guillaume Sahuc

This paper applies the DSGE-VAR methodology to assess the size of fiscal multipliers in the data and the relative contributions of two transmission mechanisms of government spending shocks, namely hand-to-mouth consumers and Edgeworth complementarity. Econometric experiments show that a DSGE model with Edgeworth complementarity is a better representation of the transmission mechanism of fiscal policy as it yields dynamic responses close to those obtained with the flexible DSGE-VAR model (i.e. an impact output multiplier larger than one and a crowding-in of private consumption). The estimated share of hand-to-mouth consumers is too small to replicate the positive response of private consumption.


Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics | 2009

Minimum Distance Estimation and Testing of DSGE Models from Structural VARs

Patrick Fève; Julien Matheron; Jean-Guillaume Sahuc

The aim of this paper is to complement the minimum distance estimation–structural vector autoregression approach when the weighting matrix is not optimal. In empirical studies, this choice is motivated by stochastic singularity or collinearity problems associated with the covariance matrix of impulse response functions. Consequently, the asymptotic distribution cannot be used to test the economic models fit. To circumvent this difficulty, we propose a simple simulation method to construct critical values for the test statistics. An empirical application with US data illustrates the proposed method.


2011 Meeting Papers | 2012

A Pitfall with DSGE-Based, Estimated, Government Spending Multipliers

Patrick Fève; Julien Matheron; Jean-Guillaume Sahuc

This paper examines issues related to the estimation of the government spending multiplier (GSM) in a Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium context. We stress a potential source of bias in the GSM arising from the combination of Edgeworth complementarity/substitutability between private consumption and government expenditures and endogenous government expenditures. Due to cross-equation restrictions, omitting the endogenous component of government policy at the estimation stage would lead an econometrician to underestimate the degree of Edgeworth complementarity and, consequently, the long-run GSM. An estimated version of our model with US postwar data shows that this bias matters quantitatively. The results prove to be robust to a number of perturbations.


Archive | 2013

The Laffer Curve in an Incomplete-Market Economy

Patrick Fève; Julien Matheron; Jean-Guillaume Sahuc

This paper investigates the characteristics of the Laffer curve in a neoclassical growth model of the US economy with incomplete markets and heterogeneous agents. The shape of the Laffer curve changes depending on which of transfers or government debt are varied to balance the government budget constraint. While the Laffer curve has the traditional shape when transfers vary, it looks like a horizontal S when debt varies. In this case, fiscal revenues can be associated with up to three different levels of taxation. This finding occurs because the tax rates change non-monotonically with public debt when markets are incomplete.


Applied Economics Letters | 2004

Partial Indexation and Inflation Dynamics: What Do the Data Say?

Jean-Guillaume Sahuc

New evidence is provided on the fit of the hybrid Phillips curve based on indexation of prices to lagged inflation and trend inflation for the Euro area and the USA over the period 1970–2002. The GMM-West estimates suggest that (i) a full indexation scheme is not data consistent whereas a partial indexation scheme allows a good fit and (ii) forgetting trend inflation induces overestimating by approximately 3–4% of the probability to not change the price, for reasonable values of trend inflation.


Oxford Economic Papers | 2015

On the Size of the Government Spending Multiplier in the Euro Area

Patrick Fève; Jean-Guillaume Sahuc

This article addresses the existence of a wide range of estimated government spending multipliers in a dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model of the euro area. Our estimation results and counterfactual exercises provide evidence that omitting the interactions of key ingredients at the estimation stage (such as Edgeworth complementarity/subtitutability between private consumption and government expenditures, endogenous government spending policy and general time nonseparable preferences) paves the way for potentially large biases. We argue that uncertainty on the quantitative assessments of fiscal programmes could partly originate from these biases.

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Eric Jondeau

Swiss Finance Institute

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