MACRODYNAMIC EFFECTS OF EFFICIENCY WAGES AND WAGE DISCRIMINATION POLICIES MODELED WITH HABIT FORMATION IN CONSUMPTION
MACRODYNAMIC EFFECTS OF EFFICIENCY WAGES AND WAGE DISCRIMINATION POLICIES MODELED WITH HABIT FORMATION IN CONSUMPTION
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Date
2018
Authors
Booth, Matthew Lowell
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Publisher
Middle Tennessee State University
Abstract
This dissertation consists of two independent chapters, and an introductory
first chapter with background and summary. While they have some theoretical
and analytical tools in common, the models are independent of each other and
each chapter can be read and understood by itself and makes its own contribution
to the subject studied.
Chapter one reviews a segment of the literature on real business cycle research,
focusing first on the modeling of efficiency wages to create equilibrium unemployment,
then on the use habit formation in consumption to capture some dynamic
features of macroeconomic variables. My innovation in the chapters that follow is
adding habit formation in consumption to a shirking efficiency wage model, and
applying DSGE techniques to create a laboratory where questions of the dynamic
effects of altering model parameters can be addressed by Impulse response and
simulations that include stochastic shocks to the economy. This chapter includes
information about the differences between two models that are studied in chapters
two and three, which are theoretical differences in how the habit formation is
modeled, and applied to different questions.
Chapter two constructs an equilibrium model that combines external habit formation
in consumption and efficiency wages arising from imperfectly observable
effort to evaluate wage, employment, and output dynamics under fiscal and technology
shocks. At certain levels of insurance and habit formation employment output
correlations and output volatilities match US data better than a model
without habit formation. However, increased employment volatility and counter-
factual negative wage-employment correlations emerge. I use impulse response
functions to explain the mechanisms that give rise to the observed changes in
second moments.
Chapter three builds on the result by using a similar analytical framework
to pose a policy question. Comparing results from two models, one where a wage
gap arises from heterogeneous worker history and another where an equal wage is
enforced, impulse response experiments compare the respective welfare costs of a
negative shock to technology in either case. The welfare cost of a recession caused
by a negative technology shock of one standard deviation in this simulation, when
wage equality is enforced, as compared to when employers are allowed to negotiate
wages with individuals based on past employment status, is about 1.0% per year
for 45 years, if expressed as a compensating variation in consumption, due to a
deeper and more persistent drop in employment before a return to steady state
growth.