My Research

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Job Market Paper

To Cap or Not to Cap? Energy Crises in a Currency Union (link)

Winner of the Peter Sinclair Prize (1st place) by the Money Macro and Finance Society

During the recent energy crisis some Euro Area countries introduced price caps on energy, while others did not, leading to about 30 percentage points higher energy inflation in uncapped countries. This paper investigates the trade-offs policymakers face with energy price caps in a two-country currency union model with shared energy supply. The cooperative, optimal outcome is for neither country to impose a price cap, since the cap is a costly market distortion. However, capping allows a country to avoid a crisis at the cost of negative spillovers on the uncapped country, characterized by high inflation and lower output. The quantitative model with non-homothetic preferences and substitutability of energy sources shows that the cost of the price cap exceeds the cost of such spillovers, explaining why some countries capped prices while others did not. Moreover, I show that the spillovers from price caps contributed to about 10 (0.5) percentage points of energy (headline) inflation in the uncapped Euro Area countries in 2022. An alternative policy of targeted transfers is a cheaper and more effective way to boost consumption of the poor without creating divergence within the union.

Publications

The Effect of Monetary Policy on Consumption Inequality: An Analysis through TANK models, Journal of Money, Credit and Banking (2023).

What transmission channels drive the effect of monetary policy on consumption inequality? This paper investigates this question with tractable Two-Agent New Keynesian models with search-and-matching frictions and wage rigidities. I make a distinction between credit-constrained households and unconstrained households and find that an expansionary monetary policy shock decreases consumption inequality between those two households through three channels: (i) the income composition channel, through fluctuations in labor and profit income; (ii) the savings redistribution channel, through fluctuations in real interest rate; and (iii) the earnings heterogeneity channel, through fluctuations in unemployment. The results are in line with the empirical evidence.

In Progress

Japanese Real Interest Rates over the Life-Cycle, R&R at Japanese Economic Review Special Issue: "Heterogeneity and Macroeconomics", with David Murakami and Ivan Shchapov. Available at SSRN.

Japan has faced rapid ageing, persistently low interest rates, sluggish growth, and deflation for decades. Concurrently, there has been a gradual convergence in productivity between young and elderly workers. This paper aims to explore the relationship between productivity, demographic shifts, and interest rates in Japan during the post-bubble era, using an overlapping generations two-agent New Keynesian (OTANK) life-cycle DSGE model. The narrowing productivity gap between younger and older cohorts puts upward pressure on interest rates. Meanwhile, factors such as longer life expectancy and negative population growth rates exert downward pressure on interest rates. The latter effect dominates. A central bank that does not account for this when setting monetary policy may induce deflationary pressure in the economy. Important policy implications emerge: Enhancing worker productivity across workers' entire life-cycle and bridging the productivity gap between younger and older workers can help offset the decline in interest rates, and monetary policy ought to account for shifting demographics.

Monetary and Exchange Rate Policies under Diagnostic Expectations, with Lahcen Bounader, Selim Elekdag and Luis-Felipe Zanna. Draft available upon request.

What is the optimal degree of exchange rate stabilization in an open economy? We revisit this classic question by introducing Diagnostic Expectations (DE) into a standard New Keynesian small open-economy model. DE is a departure from the Rational Expectations hypothesis which, through an overreaction of agents’ beliefs, generates additional endogenous macroeconomic volatility. As a first pass at disciplining the model with data, we find that the inclusion of DE can help resolve key empirical exchange rate puzzles identified in the literature such as the exchange rate disconnect and forward premium puzzles. In terms of optimal monetary policy, we find that the model with DE can alter the welfare rankings of selected exchange rate regimes established in earlier studies. In particular, under reasonable assumptions regarding the strength of DE, simulations suggest that an exchange rate peg could be welfare superior to a policy that targets consumer price index (CPI) inflation. Importantly, extreme model parameterizations are not needed to justify exchange rate stabilization.

The Effect of Wage Rigidities on the Transmission of Monetary Policy and Inequality, Department of Economics Discussion Paper Series, University of Oxford.

What is the effect of wage rigidities on the transmission of monetary policy to inequality? This paper investigates this question with a Two-Agent New Keynesian model with financially constrained and unconstrained households, and with search-and-matching frictions. I study the relative effects of the wage channel and the labour market channel in the transmission of conventional and unconventional monetary policy, and how these change with degrees of wage rigidity. My main result is that the stickier the wage, the more a contractionary monetary policy shock reduces consumption inequality, whether that is conventional monetary policy or quantitative tightening, driven by the wage channel.

Fueling the Divide: the Role of Food and Energy Prices in Driving Consumption Disparities, with Rosi Chankova.