Article

Reexamining the cyclical behavior of the relative price of investment

Paul Beaudry, Alban Moura, and Franck Portier

Abstract

The cyclical behavior of the relative price of investment goods plays an important role in many modern macroeconomic models. In this paper we examine the behavior of several measures of the relative price of investment goods for the U.S. economy over the last fifty years. In particular, we examine whether there are robust cyclical patterns, whether results differ by sub-sample and whether the nature of the deflator matters. Our main result is that there is no robust evidence that this relative price is countercyclical in the data. In fact, for the recent (post-Volcker) period, the relative price of investment appears predominantly procyclical. When looking at more disaggregated series, most measures are procyclical, a few acyclical, and only the price of equipment is significantly countercyclical for some periods and measures. The procyclical behavior of the relative price of aggregate investment is also shown to characterize six other countries of the G7.

Keywords

Relative price of investment; Business cycles; Investment shocks;

JEL codes

  • E3: Prices, Business Fluctuations, and Cycles

Reference

Paul Beaudry, Alban Moura, and Franck Portier, Reexamining the cyclical behavior of the relative price of investment, Economics Letters, Elsevier, vol. 135, October 2015, pp. 108–111.

See also

Published in

Economics Letters, Elsevier, vol. 135, October 2015, pp. 108–111