If I set the tax adjustment speed to fast, the rank condition is satisfied and everything goes back to the steady state eventually. If I set the speed to be low, the rank condition is not satisfied and debt explodes. But I could still get the paths of all the variables.
My questions are: 1. Why do I still get the solution even if the rank condition is not satisfied, and does the solution make sense? 2. How to interpret the jumps in the last period? I read some of the old posts and learned that what matters are the terminal values for those forward-looking variables, not those backward-looking ones. In my case, since I don't have the 'endval' block I assume that the forward-looking variables 'c' and 'tau' take their initial steady-state values. But still, I have a little problem understanding intuitively why debt explodes and drops to its initial level in the last period.
Thanks a lot!!!
Holly
- Code: Select all
var c, b, tau, d, I, gap;
varexo u;
parameters beta r y lambda tau0 rho;
r=0.05;
beta=1/(1+r);
y=1;
lambda=1;
tau0=0.25;
rho=0.95;
model;
c(+1)/c=(1+tau)/(1+tau(+1))*beta*(1+r);
(1+tau)*c+(1+r)*b(-1)=y+b;
c*tau+d=I+(1+r)*d(-1);
gap=I-c*tau0+r*d(-1);
tau=lambda*tau(-1)+(1-lambda)*(tau0+gap/c);
//I=I(-1)*(1+u);
I-0.188233=rho*(I(-1)-0.188233)+(1-rho)*u;
end;
initval;
c = 0.792933;
b = 0.176685;
tau = 0.25;
d = 0.2;
I = 0.188233;
gap=0;
end;
//steady;
//check;
shocks;
var u;
periods 1:5;
values 0.10;
end;
options_.maxit_=100;
simul(periods=100);