Is the Discretionary Income Effect of Oil Price Shocks a Hoax?

C. Baumeister, Lutz Kilian, Xiaoqing Zhou
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引用次数: 34

Abstract

The transmission of oil price shocks has been a question of central interest in macroeconomics since the 1970s. There has been renewed interest in this question after the large and persistent fall in the real price of oil in 2014-16. In the context of this debate, Ramey (2017) makes the striking claim that the existing literature on the transmission of oil price shocks is fundamentally confused about the question of how to quantify the effect of oil price shocks. In particular, she asserts that the discretionary income effect on private consumption, which plays a central role in contemporary accounts of the transmission of oil price shocks to the U.S. economy, makes no economic sense and has no economic foundation. Ramey suggests that the literature has too often confused the terms-of-trade effect with this discretionary income effect, and she makes the case that the effects of the oil price decline of 2014-16 on private consumption are smaller for a multitude of reasons than suggested by empirical models of the discretionary income effect. We review the main arguments in Ramey (2017) and show that none of her claims hold up to scrutiny.
油价冲击的可支配收入效应是骗局吗?
自上世纪70年代以来,油价冲击的传导一直是宏观经济学关注的核心问题。在2014年至2016年实际油价持续大幅下跌之后,人们对这个问题的兴趣重新燃起。在这场辩论的背景下,Ramey(2017)提出了一个惊人的主张,即现有的关于油价冲击传导的文献从根本上混淆了如何量化油价冲击影响的问题。特别是,她断言,可自由支配收入对私人消费的影响,在当代关于油价冲击对美国经济传导的解释中起着核心作用,没有经济意义,也没有经济基础。雷米认为,文献常常将贸易条件效应与这种可自由支配的收入效应混淆起来。她提出,2014- 2016年油价下跌对私人消费的影响,由于多种原因,比可自由支配收入效应的经验模型所显示的要小。我们回顾了Ramey(2017)的主要论点,并表明她的主张都经不起推敲。
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