jpfeifer wrote:Could you please upload the picture in question, e.g. via a zip-file?
Hi Johannes,
Sorry for not replying earlier. I was trying to get rid of all possible culprits the last days, like e.g. code typos etc. But it seems I couldn't figure that out.
So I'm sending 3 figures in this zip file.
The first one (HattedVariables) shows two observed paths for 12-month aggregate sectoral inflation rates (in Brazil), used in a heterogeneous model, already in log-deviation format. Instead of demeaning the series, I discounted the inflation targets instead. In this case, one of the log-deviation series has a clearly positive (sample) mean, even though theoretically the mean should converge to zero if I had a very long sample. I adopted this strategy on purpose, for I want to uncover the shocks that are preventing the means to be closer to zero.
The second and third ones are the standard Dynare shock decomposition pictures for both series. Notice that the black line on the shock decomposition of series PI12_m_ht resembles closely the one descibed by the black line from the first picture (HattedVariables), as expected since it is an observed series.
However, the black line on the shock decomposition of series PI12_s_ht does not resemble are the one descibed by the dotted blue line from the first picture (HattedVariables), even thou it is also another observed series. Actually, the line produced in the shock decomposition picture seems to approach that of PI12_m_ht in the end of the sample.
Again, I double and triple-checked the codes. Each endogenous variable is properly defined, as well as their dynamics equations.
Can you give me a hint?
Best
Sergio