Machine Replacement and the Business Cycle: Lumps and Bumps
- 1 September 1999
- journal article
- Published by American Economic Association in American Economic Review
- Vol. 89 (4) , 921-946
- https://doi.org/10.1257/aer.89.4.921
Abstract
This paper explores investment fluctuations due to discrete changes in a plant's capital stock. The resulting aggregate investment dynamics are surprisingly rich, reflecting the interaction between a replacement cycle, the cross-sectional distribution of the age of the capital stock, and an aggregate shock. Using plant-level data, lumpy investment is procyclical and more likely for older capital. Further, the predicted path of aggregate investment that neglects vintage effects tracks actual aggregate investment reasonably well. However, ignoring fluctuations in the cross-sectional distribution of investment vintages can yield predictable nontrivial errors in forecasting changes in aggregate investment. (JEL E22, E32)Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- The replacement problemJournal of Monetary Economics, 1997
- Leaving Teaching in the UK: A Duration AnalysisThe Economic Journal, 1995
- Plant-Level Adjustment and Aggregate Investment DynamicsBrookings Papers on Economic Activity, 1995
- Microeconomic Adjustment Hazards and Aggregate DynamicsThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1993
- Macroeconomic implications of production bunching: Factor demand linkagesJournal of Monetary Economics, 1992
- Gross Job Creation, Gross Job Destruction, and Employment ReallocationThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1992
- Unemployment Insurance and Unemployment SpellsEconometrica, 1990
- Flexible parametric estimation of duration and competing risk modelsJournal of Applied Econometrics, 1990
- A Method for Minimizing the Impact of Distributional Assumptions in Econometric Models for Duration DataEconometrica, 1984
- On the Cost of AdjustmentThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1971