Ramsey vs osr

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Ramsey vs osr

Postby fabiover » Fri Aug 02, 2013 11:08 am

Hi all,

I have the following problem/question.

Suppose that the central bank wants to minimize the volatility of inflation and consumption, i.e. the Loss Function is the sum of inflation and output variances.

I first run the Ramsey policy (see model_Ramsey.mod) where

planner_objective PI^2+C^2;
ramsey_policy(planner_discount=0.99);


and found that the Loss Function is 15.5275 (this is NOT the “Approximated value of planner objective function” reported by Dynare)

Then I run the same model with osr (actually I did a grid search for the coefficient in the Taylor rule, see model_osr.mod) and found that the Loss Function is 1.6949.

So the loss function under the Ramsey policy is bigger than the loss function obtained with an optimal Taylor rule, which is not what I expected to find (I used the same discount factor, 0.99).

Is there an explanation for this result?

Many thanks for your help

Best

Fabio
Attachments
model_osr.mod
(1.54 KiB) Downloaded 130 times
model_Ramsey.mod
(1.19 KiB) Downloaded 140 times
Fabio Verona
Research Economist
Monetary Policy and Research Department
BANK OF FINLAND
Snellmaninaukio, Helsinki
PO Box 160, FI-00101 HELSINKI, FINLAND
phone +358 10 831 2464
www.bof.fi
http://fabioverona.rvsteam.net/
fabiover
 
Posts: 9
Joined: Wed Sep 26, 2012 10:10 am
Location: Helsinki

Re: Ramsey vs osr

Postby fabiover » Fri Aug 02, 2013 11:11 am

I have an additional question. Why the Ramsey code does not work if I use

planner_objective PI^2+0.1*C^2;

?

What can I do in this case?

Thanks again
Fabio Verona
Research Economist
Monetary Policy and Research Department
BANK OF FINLAND
Snellmaninaukio, Helsinki
PO Box 160, FI-00101 HELSINKI, FINLAND
phone +358 10 831 2464
www.bof.fi
http://fabioverona.rvsteam.net/
fabiover
 
Posts: 9
Joined: Wed Sep 26, 2012 10:10 am
Location: Helsinki

Re: Ramsey vs osr

Postby iacoviel » Fri Aug 02, 2013 2:06 pm

Are you discounting in both cases? Maybe in Ramsey you are computing a discounted sum of variances, in osr just the current one.
iacoviel
 
Posts: 38
Joined: Wed Feb 01, 2006 6:25 pm

Re: Ramsey vs osr

Postby sirene » Sat Aug 03, 2013 2:03 pm

Dear experts,

I have donwloaded the codes but it gives the following errors, ı dont understand why.I would be thankful if you give an answer.Sincereley,

??? Undefined function or method 'steadys' for input arguments of type 'double'.

Error in ==> model_osr at 118
[ZU,HU,RU,PIU,CU] = steadys(pitarget,beta,phi,tau,theta,psi);

Error in ==> dynare at 120
evalin('base',fname) ;
sirene
 
Posts: 14
Joined: Fri Jul 19, 2013 1:16 pm

Re: Ramsey vs osr

Postby fabiover » Wed Aug 07, 2013 6:26 am

I forgot to upload the file that computes the steady state
Attachments
steadys.m
(966 Bytes) Downloaded 98 times
Fabio Verona
Research Economist
Monetary Policy and Research Department
BANK OF FINLAND
Snellmaninaukio, Helsinki
PO Box 160, FI-00101 HELSINKI, FINLAND
phone +358 10 831 2464
www.bof.fi
http://fabioverona.rvsteam.net/
fabiover
 
Posts: 9
Joined: Wed Sep 26, 2012 10:10 am
Location: Helsinki

Re: Ramsey vs osr

Postby fabiover » Wed Aug 07, 2013 6:27 am

Dear Matteo,
I am discounting using the same discount factor, and I am computing the sum of the unconditional variances (as reported by Dynare)
Thanks
Fabio Verona
Research Economist
Monetary Policy and Research Department
BANK OF FINLAND
Snellmaninaukio, Helsinki
PO Box 160, FI-00101 HELSINKI, FINLAND
phone +358 10 831 2464
www.bof.fi
http://fabioverona.rvsteam.net/
fabiover
 
Posts: 9
Joined: Wed Sep 26, 2012 10:10 am
Location: Helsinki


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