Output Gap Measurement and Prospects in the Wake of the Crisis
Menzie Chinn (July 23rd, 2009) Writes:
Different concepts of potential GDP
For serious macroeconomists, the magnitude (or existence) of the output gap is a central factor for determining the appropriate policy actions (see for instance Weidner and Williams). In several recent posts, I've discussed the variety of approaches to estimating the output gap [0] [1]. A recent symposium on Projecting Potential Growth published by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis is an excellent resource for anybody who wants to think seriously and carefully about the challenges in estimating this variable. In the lead article entitled "What Do We Know (And Not Know) About Potential Output?", the authors John Fernald and Susanto Basu write:
To keep the discussion manageable, we confine our discussion of potential output to neoclassical growth models with exogenous technical progress in the short and the long run; we also focus exclusively on the United States. We make
...Banking, Cbo, China, Cleary, Economics, Federal Reserve Bank, finance, Food Prices, James Morley;, Jeremy Piger;, John Fernald, marginal products, Market Commentary, model, Oecd, Oil, Oil Prices, production technology;, St. Louis, Susanto Basu, technology shocks, United States, Valletta, Williams


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