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Working Paper

Endogenous Growth, Skill Obsolescence and Output Hysteresis in a New Keynesian Model with Unemployment

Authors

  • Lechthaler
  • W.
  • Tesfaselassie
  • M.F.

Publication Date

JEL Classification

E24 E31 E32

Key Words

Endogenous growth

monetary policy

nominal rigidities

output hysteresis

search and matching

unemployment

Related Topics

Monetary Policy

Labor Market

Growth

Economic & Financial Crises

Business Cycle

We embed human capital-based endogenous growth into a New-Keynesian model with search and matching frictions in the labor market and skill obsolescence from long-term unemployment. The model can account for key features of the Great Recession: a decline in productivity growth, the relative stability of inflation despite a pronounced fall in output (the "missing disinflation puzzle"), and a permanent gap between output and the pre-crisis trend output. In the model, lower aggregate demand raises unemployment and the training costs associated with skill obsolescence. Lower employment hinders learning-by-doing, which slows down human capital accumulation, feeding back into even fewer vacancies than justified by the demand shock alone. These feedback channels mitigate the disinflationary effect of the demand shock while amplifying its contractionary effect on output. The temporary growth slowdown translates into output hysteresis (permanently lower output and labor productivity).

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