jpfeifer wrote:1. This suggests that there is a fundamental modeling problem present. It seems (at least) two of the variables in your model are only jointly determined, but not separately. You need to find out which ones. Are you for example sure that consumption of the two agents is uniquely determined in your setup? It could be that the aggregate movements of the variables are unique, but not their split.
2. That is usually impractical, because the mapping from these matrices back to the model economics are intractable.
1. I think that consumption variables are pinned down, at least in the steady state. I've assigned the C_ratio between the two agents' consumption in steady state, and the Y_ss is fixed and unrelated to the C_ratio. This will pin down the steady state consumption and labor (because of the real wage decision) for each type. If the spilt is undetermined, then the steady states will be undetermined. Not sure this argument is reasonable or not.
2. A separate question. If I cannot calibrate the model, will it work that I give the prior of some parameters and estimate the model? Is the calibration success necessary for the success of Bayesian estimation of the linearized model?
Thanks!