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      The Macroeconomic Impact of Microeconomic Shocks: Beyond Hulten's Theorem

      1 , 2
      Econometrica
      The Econometric Society

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          Abstract

          We provide a nonlinear characterization of the macroeconomic impact of microeconomic productivity shocks in terms of reduced‐form nonparametric elasticities for efficient economies. We also show how microeconomic parameters are mapped to these reduced‐form general equilibrium elasticities. In this sense, we extend the foundational theorem of Hulten (1978) beyond the first order to capture nonlinearities. Key features ignored by first‐order approximations that play a crucial role are: structural microeconomic elasticities of substitution, network linkages, structural microeconomic returns to scale, and the extent of factor reallocation. In a business‐cycle calibration with sectoral shocks, nonlinearities magnify negative shocks and attenuate positive shocks, resulting in an aggregate output distribution that is asymmetric (negative skewness), fat‐tailed (excess kurtosis), and has a negative mean, even when shocks are symmetric and thin‐tailed. Average output losses due to short‐run sectoral shocks are an order of magnitude larger than the welfare cost of business cycles calculated by Lucas (1987). Nonlinearities can also cause shocks to critical sectors to have disproportionate macroeconomic effects, almost tripling the estimated impact of the 1970s oil shocks on world aggregate output. Finally, in a long‐run growth context, nonlinearities, which underpin Baumol's cost disease via the increase over time in the sales shares of low‐growth bottleneck sectors, account for a 20 percentage point reduction in aggregate TFP growth over the period 1948–2014 in the United States.

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          Most cited references40

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          Systemic Risk and Stability in Financial Networks

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            What is an oil shock?

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              The Network Origins of Aggregate Fluctuations

              (2012)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Econometrica
                ECTA
                The Econometric Society
                0012-9682
                2019
                2019
                : 87
                : 4
                : 1155-1203
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Economics, UCLA
                [2 ]Department of Economics, Harvard University
                Article
                10.3982/ECTA15202
                df808a60-1d4c-457d-93e3-8c3dd2ece7a8
                © 2019
                History

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