Greenwood–Hercowitz–Huffman preferences
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Greenwood–Hercowitz–Huffman preferences are a particular functional form of
utility As a topic of economics, utility is used to model worth or value. Its usage has evolved significantly over time. The term was introduced initially as a measure of pleasure or happiness as part of the theory of utilitarianism by moral philosoph ...
developed by Jeremy Greenwood,
Zvi Hercowitz Zvi Hercowitz (born December 21, 1945 in Rosario, Argentina) is professor emeritus at Tel Aviv University's School of Economics and has been a member of the montetary committee of the Bank of Israel since 2017. He emigrated to Israel in 1969 and ...
, and Gregory Huffman, in their 1988 paper ''Investment, Capacity Utilization, and the Real Business Cycle''.An archive for the original research is here: http://hdl.handle.net/1802/2688 It describes the
macroeconomic Macroeconomics (from the Greek prefix ''makro-'' meaning "large" + ''economics'') is a branch of economics dealing with performance, structure, behavior, and decision-making of an economy as a whole. For example, using interest rates, taxes, and ...
impact of technological changes that affect the productivity of new capital goods. The paper also introduced the notions of investment-specific technological progress and capacity utilization into modern macroeconomics. GHH preferences have Gorman form. Often macroeconomic models assume that agents' utility is additively separable in consumption and labor. I.e., frequently the period utility function is something like :u(c,l) = \frac- \psi \frac where c is consumption and l is labor (e.g., hours worked). Note that this is separable in that the utility (loss) from working does not directly affect the utility (gain or loss) from consumption, i.e. the cross-derivative of utility with respect to consumption and labor is 0. GHH preferences might instead have a form like: :u(c,l) = \frac\left(c - \psi \frac \right)^ where now consumption and labor are not additively separable in the same way. For an agent with this utility function, the amount she/he works will actually affect the amount of utility she/he receives from consumption, i.e. the cross-derivative of utility with respect to consumption and labor is unequal to 0. More generally, the preferences are of the form :u(c,l) = U\left(c - G(l)\right), U'>0, U''<0, G'>0, G''>0. The first order condition of u(c,l) with respect l is given by : U'\left(c - G(l)\right)\left(\frac - G'(l) \right) = 0 which implies : \frac = G'(l). As dc/dl is typically just a wage w, this means the labor choice l is a function of only the wage and has a closed form with l = G'^(w). As a result, the preferences are exceptionally convenient to work with. Moreover, as the
marginal rate of substitution In economics, the marginal rate of substitution (MRS) is the rate at which a consumer can give up some amount of one good in exchange for another good while maintaining the same level of utility. At equilibrium consumption levels (assuming no exte ...
is independent of consumption and only depends on the real wage, there is no
wealth effect The wealth effect is the change in spending that accompanies a change in perceived wealth. Usually the wealth effect is positive: spending changes in the same direction as perceived wealth. Effect on individuals Changes in a consumer's wealth cause ...
on the labour supply. Using preference without a wealth effect on the labour supply might help to explain the aggregate economic behaviour following news shocks, and government spending shocks. Their use is also very common in open macro studies.


Generalization: Jaimovich–Rebelo preferences

GHH preferences are not consistent with a balanced growth path. Jaimovich and Rebelo proposed a preference specification that allows scaling the short-run wealth effect on the labor supply. The two polar cases are the standard King–Plosser–Rebelo preferences and the GHH-preferences.


References

*Jeremy Greenwood,
Zvi Hercowitz Zvi Hercowitz (born December 21, 1945 in Rosario, Argentina) is professor emeritus at Tel Aviv University's School of Economics and has been a member of the montetary committee of the Bank of Israel since 2017. He emigrated to Israel in 1969 and ...
and Gregory W. Huffman (1988
"Investment, capacity utilization, and the real business cycle"
(Jeremy Greenwood's website) ''American Economic Review'' 78 (3): 402–17. ;Notes {{DEFAULTSORT:Greenwood-Hercowitz-Huffman preferences Business cycle theories Utility function types