Abstract
PurposeIn this study, inventories are introduced as a productive input into a real-business-cycle (RBC) setup augmented with the government.Design/methodology/approachThe model is calibrated to Bulgarian data for the period 1999–2019. The quantitative importance of the presence of inventories is investigated.FindingsThe quantitative effect of inventories is found to be important: decreasing consumption volatility and increasing employment variability. Those results, however, are at the expense of decreasing wage volatility and increasing investment volatility, and generally worsening the contemporaneous correlations of the main variables with output.Originality/valueFluctuations in inventory levels matter for business cycle fluctuations in Bulgaria, which is a novel result. Still, there is a need for more research on the incorporation of inventories into RBC models to better fit the Bulgarian experience.
Subject
General Environmental Science
Reference13 articles.
1. Retain inventory behavior and business fluctuations;Brookings Papers on Economic Activity,1981
2. Inventories, rational expectations, and the business cycle;Journal of Monetary Economics,1981
3. Bulgarian National Bank (2020), “Bulgarian National Bank statistics”, available at: www.bnb.bg (accessed 1 November 2020).
4. Why does inventory investment fluctuate so much?;Journal of Monetary Economics,1988
5. Indivisible labor and the business cycle;Journal of Monetary Economics,1985