Venditti

Publications

Introduction (Chapter1)Book chapterKazuo Nishimura, Alain Venditti and Nicholas C. Yannelis, In: Sunspots and Non-Linear Dynamics - Essays in Honor of Jean-Michel Grandmont, K. Nishimura, A. Venditti and N. C. Yannelis (Eds.), 2017, Volume 31, pp. 1-11, Springer-Verlag, 2017

This chapter presents a brief overview of the career and main contributions of Professor Jean-Michel Grandmont. It also provides a summarized description of the 16 papers written in his honor by his friends and colleagues.

Collateral and growth cycles with heterogeneous agentsJournal articleStefano Bosi, Mohanad Ismael and Alain Venditti, Journal of Macroeconomics, Volume 48, Issue C, pp. 327-350, 2016

We investigate the effects of collateral and monetary policy on economic growth within a Ramsey equilibrium model where agents have different discount factors. Introducing liquidity constraints in segmented markets where (poor) impatient agents without collateral have limited access to credit, we study their implications in terms of welfare and business cycles (based on deterministic cycles through bifurcations and self-fulfilling prophecies). We find that an accommodative monetary policy may be growth-enhancing and welfare-improving (through the inequality reduction) while making unpleasant fluctuations more likely. Conversely, a regulation reinforcing the role of collateral and tempering the financial market imperfections may stimulate the economic growth while pursuing the goal of stabilization.

Public Spending as a Source of Endogenous Business Cycles in a Ramsey Model with Many AgentsJournal articleKazuo Nishimura, Carine Nourry, Thomas Seegmuller and Alain Venditti, Macroeconomic Dynamics, Volume 20, Issue 02, pp. 504-524, 2016

We introduce public spending, financed through income taxation, into the Ramsey model with heterogeneous agents. Public spending as a source of welfare generates more complex dynamics. In contrast to previous contributions focusing on similar models but with wasteful public spending, limit cycles through Hopf bifurcation and expectation-driven fluctuations appear if the degree of capital–labor substitution is high enough to be compatible with capital income monotonicity. Moreover, unlike frameworks with a representative agent, our results do not require externalities in production and are compatible with a weakly elastic labor supply with respect to wage.

Sunspot fluctuations in two-sector models: New results with additively separable preferencesJournal articleFrédéric Dufourt, Kazuo Nishimura and Alain Venditti, International Journal of Economic Theory, Volume 12, Issue 1, pp. 67-83, 2016

We analyze local indeterminacy and sunspot-driven fluctuations in the standard two-sector model with additively separable preferences. We provide a detailed theoretical analysis enabling us to derive relevant bifurcation loci and to characterize the steady-state local stability properties as a function of various structural parameters influencing the degree of increasing returns to scale, the amount of intertemporal substitution in consumption, and the elasticity of the aggregate labor supply curve. On the theoretical side, we prove the existence of both a flip and a Hopf bifurcation locus in the corresponding parameter space. We also show that local indeterminacy can be obtained under any labor supply elasticity or under an arbitrarily low elasticity of intertemporal substitution in consumption. On the empirical side, we find that indeterminacy and sunspot fluctuations are robust features of two-sector models, prevailing for most empirically plausible calibrations for these parameters. (This abstract was borrowed from another version of this item.)

Introduction to financial frictions and debt constraintsJournal articleRaouf Boucekkine, Kazuo Nishimura and Alain Venditti, Journal of Mathematical Economics, Volume 61, Issue C, pp. 271-275, 2015

This is an introduction to the special section on financial frictions and debt constraints.

Fiscal policy, debt constraint and expectations-driven volatilityJournal articleKazuo Nishimura, Thomas Seegmuller and Alain Venditti, Journal of Mathematical Economics, Volume 61, Issue C, pp. 305-316, 2015

Imposing some constraints on public debt is often justified regarding sustainability and stability issues. This is especially the case when the ratio of public debt over GDP is restricted to be constant. Using a Ramsey model, we show that such a constraint can however be a fundamental source of indeterminacy, and therefore, of expectations-driven fluctuations. Indeed, through the intertemporal budget constraint of the government, income taxation negatively depends on future debt, i.e. on the expected level of production. This mechanism ensures that expectations on the future tax rate may be self-fulfilling. We show that this is promoted by a larger ratio of debt over GDP.

Indeterminacy and sunspots in two-sector RBC models with generalized no-income-effect preferencesJournal articleFrédéric Dufourt, Kazuo Nishimura and Alain Venditti, Journal of Economic Theory, Volume 157, Issue C, pp. 1056-1080, 2015

We analyze sunspot-driven fluctuations in the standard two-sector {RBC} model with moderate increasing returns to scale and generalized no-income-effect preferences à la Greenwood, Hercovitz and Huffman [13]. We provide a detailed theoretical analysis enabling us to derive relevant bifurcation loci and to characterize the steady-state local stability properties as a function of various structural parameters. We show that local indeterminacy occurs through flip and Hopf bifurcations for a large set of values for the elasticity of intertemporal substitution in consumption, provided that the labor supply is sufficiently inelastic. Finally, we provide a detailed quantitative analysis of the model. Computing, on a quarterly basis, a new set of empirical moments related to two broadly defined consumption and investment sectors, we are able to identify, among the set of admissible calibrations consistent with sunspot equilibria, the ones that provide the best fit of the data. The model properly calibrated solves several empirical puzzles traditionally associated with two-sector {RBC} models.

On the (De)Stabilizing Effect of Public Debt in a Ramsey Model with Heterogeneous AgentsJournal articleKazuo Nishimura, Carine Nourry, Thomas Seegmuller and Alain Venditti, International Journal of Economic Theory, Volume 11, Issue 1, pp. 7-24, 2015

We introduce public debt in a Ramsey model with heterogenous agents and a public spending externality affecting utility which is financed by income tax and public debt. We show that public debt considered as a fixed portion of GDP can have a stabilizing or destabilizing effect depending on some fundamental elasticities. When the public spending externality is weak and the elasticity of capital labor substitution is low enough, public debt can only be destabilizing, generating damped or persistent macroeconomic fluctuations. Whereas when the public spending externality and the elasticity of capital labor substitution are strong enough, public debt can be stabilizing, driving to monotone convergence an economy experiencing damped or persistent fluctuations without debt.

Destabilization effect of international trade in a perfect foresight dynamic general equilibrium modelJournal articleKazuo Nishimura, Alain Venditti and Makoto Yano, Economic Theory, Volume 55, Issue 2, pp. 357-392, 2014

In the present paper, we consider a two-country, two-good, two-factor general equilibrium model with CIES nonlinear preferences, asymmetric technologies across countries and decreasing returns to scale. It is shown that aggregate instability and endogenous fluctuations may occur due to international trade. In particular, we prove that the integration into a common market on which countries trade the produced good and the capital input may lead to period-two cycles even when the closed-economy equilibrium is saddle-point stable in both countries. Copyright Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2014

Aggregate instability under balanced-budget consumption taxes: A re-examinationJournal articleCarine Nourry, Thomas Seegmuller and Alain Venditti, Journal of Economic Theory, Volume 148, Issue 5, pp. 1977-2006, 2013

We re-examine the destabilizing role of balanced-budget fiscal policy rules based on consumption taxation. Using a one-sector model with infinitely-lived households, we consider a specification of preferences derived from Jaimovich (2008) [14] and Jaimovich and Rebelo (2009) [15] which is flexible enough to encompass varying degrees of income effect. When the income effect is not too large, we show that there exists a Laffer curve, which explains the multiplicity of steady states, and that non-linear consumption taxation may destabilize the economy, promoting expectation-driven fluctuations, if the elasticity of intertemporal substitution in consumption is sufficiently larger than one and the tax rate is counter-cyclical with respect to consumption. Numerical illustrations also show that consumption taxation may be a source of instability for most OECD countries for a wide range of structural parametersʼ configurations. We finally prove the robustness of our conclusions if we consider a discrete-time setup.