Economics Webinar - The Labor Demand and Labor Supply Channels of Monetary Policy

3:00pm - 4:30pm
Online via Zoom

Monetary policy is conventionally understood to influence labor demand, with little effect on labor supply. We estimate the response of labor market flows to high-frequency changes in interest rates around FOMC announcements and Fed Chair speeches and find evidence that, in contrast to the consensus view, a contractionary monetary policy shock leads to a significant increase in labor supply: workers reduce the rate at which they quit jobs to non-employment, and non-employed individuals increase their job-seeking behavior. These effects are quantitatively important: holding supply-driven labor market flows constant, the decline in employment from a contractionary monetary policy shock would be twice as large. To interpret our findings, we estimate a heterogeneous agent model with frictional labor markets and an active labor supply margin. The model rationalizes existing estimates of small labor supply responses to idiosyncratic transfers with our new evidence of a large labor supply response to an aggregate shock.

Event Format
Speakers / Performers:
Prof. Eric Swanson
University of California, Irvine

https://experts.communications.uci.edu/profile.php?e=eric.swanson

Language
English
Recommended For
Alumni
Faculty and staff
PG students
Organizer
Department of Economics
Contact

Julie Wong via email: ecseminar@ust.hk

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