jpfeifer wrote:This opens up a lot of questions, mostly about identification. If phi_t is marginal costs determined in the rest of the model and D_t does not appear anywhere else in the model, it should not determine/affect the dynamics of anything else in the model and is therefore redundant. You will be estimating parameters that are not needed for the model. Maybe you should try with a calibrated model whether anything changes when you change these parameters that now only show up in the measurement equation.
A second question is whether Y_t and D_t really have different trends in the long-run? If yes, this would most probably kill the balanced growth path property. For that reason I am not completely convinced this setup is correct.
Dear Johannes,
I really appreciate you taking your time to answer my question in so detail. Many thanks.
Your description perfectly matches my model. Yes, the debt equation is
redundant , and is only used for introducing debt data in measurement equation when estimate the model.
In the long run, Debt/Output data ratio is growing over time so they actually have different trend. Even though in Econometrica(2013) paper by Zheng Liu,etc, they assume Debt has same trend with output, in my model I do not want to assume that , since the estimation results would otherwise have been rather bad.
Could you please have a look attached modified measurement equation ? Now if I assume model Dt has same trend with output, but data debt matches the product of (a trend ratio) and ( Dt) in measurement equation, would this be a problem? Still need to estimate the AR1 ....it is just like a measurement error but with persistence.
Kind regards,
Catherine