TY - JOUR AU - Atkeson,Andrew AU - Phelan,Christopher TI - Reconsidering the Costs of Business Cycles with Incomplete Markets JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 4719 PY - 1994 Y2 - April 1994 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w4719 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w4719.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Andrew Atkeson Bunche Hall 9381 Department of Economics UCLA Box 951477 Los Angeles, CA 90095-1477 Tel: 866/312-9770 Fax: 310/825-9528 E-Mail: andy@atkeson.net Christopher Phelan Research Department Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis 90 Hennepin Avenue Minneapolis, MN 55401 E-Mail: cjp@res.mpls.frb.fed.us M1 - published as Andrew Atkeson, Christopher Phelan. "Reconsidering the Costs of Business Cycles with Incomplete Markets," in Stanley Fischer and Julio J. Rotemberg, eds., "NBER Macroeconomics Annual 1994, Volume 9" MIT Press (1994) AB - In this paper, we measure the potential welfare gains from counter-cyclical policy in an economy with incomplete markets. In the course of conducting this measurement, we focus on two questions as central to the determination of those potential gains: (1) what is the likely effect of counter-cyclical policy on the nature of the income risk faced by individuals in the economy, and (2) what are the likely general equilibrium effects brought about as asset prices change due to the implementation of counter-cyclical policies? In taking up the first question, we see it as critical to distinguish whether the main effect of counter-cyclical policy is to directly reduce the income risk faced by each individual or is simply to reduce the correlation across individuals in the income risk that they face. We present a model of the wage and employment risk faced by individuals over the cycle in which the levels of those risks are chosen endogenously. On the basis of that model, we argue that the main effect of counter- cyclical policy aimed at reducing aggregate fluctuations may be simply to remove the correlation across individuals in the unemployment risk that they face. We then use asset price data to argue that in an incomplete markets framework, the potential welfare gains from counter-cyclical policy are close to zero. ER -