Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Sergio Rebelo is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Sergio Rebelo.


Journal of Monetary Economics | 1993

Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth: An Empirical Investigation

William Easterly; Sergio Rebelo

Abstract This paper describes the empirical regularities relating fiscal policy variables, the level of development, and the rate of growth. We employ historical data, recent cross-section data and newly constructed public investment series. Our main findings are: (i) there is a strong association between the development level and the fiscal structure: poor countries rely heavily on international trade taxes, while income taxes are only important in developed economies; (ii) fiscal policy is influenced by the scale of the economy, measured by its population; (iii) investment in transport and communication is consistently correlated with growth; (iv) the effects of taxation are difficult to isolate empirically.


Journal of Monetary Economics | 1988

Production, growth and business cycles: I. The basic neoclassical model

Robert G. King; Charles I. Plosser; Sergio Rebelo

This paper presents the neoclassical model of capital accumulation augmented by choice of labor supply as the basic framework of modern real business cycle analysis. Preferences and production possibilities are restricted so that the economy displays steady state growth. Then we explore the implications of the basic model for perfect foresight capital accumulation and for economic fluctuations initiated by impulses to technology. We argue that the neoclassical approach holds considerable promise for enhancing our understanding of fluctuations. Nevertheless, the basic model does have some important shortcomings. In particular, substantial persistence in technology shocks is required if the model economy is to exhibit periods of economic activity that persistently deviate from a deterministic trend.


Journal of Political Economy | 2011

When is the Government Spending Multiplier Large

Lawrence J. Christiano; Martin Eichenbaum; Sergio Rebelo

We argue that the government-spending multiplier can be much larger than one when the zero lower bound on the nominal interest rate binds. The larger the fraction of government spending that occurs while the nominal interest rate is zero, the larger the value of the multiplier. After providing intuition for these results, we investigate the size of the multiplier in a dynamic, stochastic, general equilibrium model. In this model the multiplier effect is substantially larger than one when the zero bound binds. Our model is consistent with the behavior of key macro aggregates during the recent financial crisis.


Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control | 1993

LOW FREQUENCY FILTERING AND REAL BUSINESS CYCLES

Robert G. King; Sergio Rebelo

This paper discusses in detail the Hodrick-Prescott (1980) filter from time and frequency domain perspectives, motivating it as a generalization of the exponential smoothing filter. We show that the HP filter — when applied to large samples — contains a centered fourth difference and hence renders stationary time series that are ‘difference-stationary’ and, indeed, integrated of higher order. However, our application of the HP filter to U.S. time series and to the simulated outcomes of real business cycle models leads us to question its widespread use as a unique method of trend elimination. We provide examples of how HP filtering dramatically alters measures of persistence, variability, and comovement.


Journal of Political Economy | 1995

Growth effects of flat-rate taxes

Nancy L. Stokey; Sergio Rebelo

Recent estimates of the potential growth effects of tax reform vary wildly, ranging from zero to eight percentage points. Using an endogenous growth model, we assess which model features and parameter values are important for determining the quantitative impact of tax reform. We find that the critical parameters are factor shares, depreciation rates, the elasticity of intertemporal substitution, and the elasticity of labor supply. The elasticities of substitution in production, on the other hand, are relatively unimportant. The quantitative estimates in several recent papers are compared with each other and with some of the evidence from U.S. experience. We find that Robert Lucass conclusion, that tax reform would have little or no effect on the U.S. growth rate, is theoretically robust and consistent with the evidence.


The Review of Economic Studies | 2001

Beyond balanced growth

Piyabha Kongsamut; Sergio Rebelo; Danyang Xie

Balanced growth models are commonly used in macroeconomics because they are consistent with the well-known Kaldor facts regarding economic growth. These models, however, are inconsistent with one of the most striking regularities of the growth process—the massive reallocation of labour from agriculture into manufacturing and services. This paper presents a simple model consistent with both the Kaldor facts and the dynamics of sectoral labour reallocation.


Journal of Monetary Economics | 1988

Production, growth and business cycles: II. New directions

Robert G. King; Charles I. Plosser; Sergio Rebelo

Abstract This paper outlines new directions for investigations of real business cycle models: consideration of stochastic growth of exogenous and endogenous forms, analysis of suboptimal outcomes arising due to externalities of distorting taxes, and implications of labor market heterogeneity.


Journal of Political Economy | 1993

Labor Hoarding and the Business Cycle

A. Craig Burnside; Martin Eichenbaum; Sergio Rebelo

This paper investigates the sensitivity of Solow residual based measures of technology shocks to labor hoarding behavior. Using a structural model of labor hoarding and the identifying restriction that innovations to technology shocks are orthogonal to innovations in government consumption, we estimate the fraction of the variability of the Solow residual that is due to technology shocks. Our results support the view that a significant proportion of movements in the Solow residual are artifacts of labor hoarding behavior. Specifically, we estimate that the variance of innovations to technology is roughly 50 percent less than that implied by standard real business cycle models. In addition, our results suggest that existing real business cycle studies substantially overstate the extent to which technology shocks account for the variability of postwar aggregate U.S. output.


European Economic Review | 1995

Business Cycles in a Small Open Economy

Isabel Horta Correia; João César das Neves; Sergio Rebelo

This paper discusses a dynamic model that is consistent with the main empirical regularities of economic fluctuations in open economies. While other models in this class have relied on non-separable preferences or finite horizons to generate a realistic consumption volatility, we show that there is a simple class of time separable preferences that is consistent with the cyclical volatilities of the components of the national income accounts identity as well as with the countercyclical character of the balance of trade.


Journal of Political Economy | 1999

Prospective deficits and the asian currency crisis

Craig Burnside; Martin Eichenbaum; Sergio Rebelo

This paper argues that a principal cause of the 1997 Asian currency crisis was large prospective deficits associated with implicit bailout guarantees to failing banking systems. The expectation that these future deficits would be at least partially financed by seigniorage revenues or an inflation tax on outstanding nominal debt led to a collapse of the fixed exchange rate regimes in Asia. We articulate this view using a simple model whose key feature is that a speculative attack is inevitable once the present value of future government deficits rises. We present empirical evidence in support of the key assumptions underlying our interpretation of the crisis.

Collaboration


Dive into the Sergio Rebelo's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Martin Eichenbaum

National Bureau of Economic Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ariel Burstein

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Craig Burnside

National Bureau of Economic Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

João César das Neves

The Catholic University of America

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Danyang Xie

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge