Decision Rules in Dynare++ and Normal Disturbances
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2011 1:48 am
Hey all,
I have a question about the transition rule computed by Dynare++. On page 9 of the tutorial, there is a claim that Dynare++ assumes that exogenous shocks (u_t) are serially independent and Normally distributed: u_t ~ N (0, SIGMA). However, it doesn't seem that the literature, when presenting perturbation methods, assume that shocks are Gaussian. As an example, Schmitt-Grohé and Uribe (2004) (link: http://www.columbia.edu/~mu2166/2nd_order/2nd_order.pdf), page 758, claim that the disturbance must "have a bounded support and to be independently and identically distributed, with mean zero and variance/covariance matrix I." It does not imply Normal shocks, but only iid disturbances.
I would like to know where, exactly, in the transition rule computed by Dynare++ the assumption of Gaussian errors kicks in, and how the transition rule would change if Non-Gaussian disturbances were assumed.
Thanks in advance,
Angelo
I have a question about the transition rule computed by Dynare++. On page 9 of the tutorial, there is a claim that Dynare++ assumes that exogenous shocks (u_t) are serially independent and Normally distributed: u_t ~ N (0, SIGMA). However, it doesn't seem that the literature, when presenting perturbation methods, assume that shocks are Gaussian. As an example, Schmitt-Grohé and Uribe (2004) (link: http://www.columbia.edu/~mu2166/2nd_order/2nd_order.pdf), page 758, claim that the disturbance must "have a bounded support and to be independently and identically distributed, with mean zero and variance/covariance matrix I." It does not imply Normal shocks, but only iid disturbances.
I would like to know where, exactly, in the transition rule computed by Dynare++ the assumption of Gaussian errors kicks in, and how the transition rule would change if Non-Gaussian disturbances were assumed.
Thanks in advance,
Angelo