jpfeifer wrote:By specifying the exogenous process as a unit root process. Any shock will be permanent. Note that this only works for IRFs, but not stochastic simulations as the simulation will move arbitrarily far away from the initial approximation point/steady state and the solution used may become wildly inaccurate.
jpfeifer wrote:The variance of the shocks block is used for computing decision rules and thus matters. For IRFs, by convention we use a one standard deviation shocks.Because the IRFs are generated using the decision rules, they are also affected by the variance.
As discussed in Schmitt-Grohé/Uribe (2004) - Solving Dynamic General Equilibrium Models Using a Second-Order Approximation to the Policy Function, the variance at second order affects only the constant term, not the slope. As discussed in Fernandez-Villaverde et al (2011) - Risk Matters does only at third order the variance affect the slope.
You are right that at second order the IRFs should not go back to steady state. But you are missing that Dynare at second order provides GIRFs at the ergodic mean and the GIRFs will always return to the ergodic mean.
Maybe the RBC_state_dependent_GIRF.mod on my homepage can clarify matters.
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