Solving a question with more unknowns than equations












0












$begingroup$


I am not sure if I am thick in the head or not, but I am trying to replicate this paper: https://www.nber.org/papers/w19086.pdf. The equations characterising the equilibrium are given on Page $22$.



Unfortunately it seems as though there are 7 unknowns but only 6 equations (well I am trying to calculate the steady state, so for any time varying variable $X$ which is time varying $X_{t+1} = X_t = X$ and thats how it becomes only 7 unknowns.)



The unknowns are:
$widetilde{K}, widetilde{Q}, widetilde{C}, widetilde{Y},tau_k,tau_l and L$



I am omitting the time subscripts because I am trying to solve for the steady state, so again, variables are constant through time.



I tried going through the paper again and how we got to the equations but to no avail. I may be missing something super basic here but any help would be great!










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    What are the unknowns? $K,Q,C,Y$ with subscripts $t$ and $t+1$? which variable are you referring to as $X$?
    $endgroup$
    – Dylan
    Jan 8 at 8:14












  • $begingroup$
    @Dylan Hi, I have edited in some more information into the answers. X is just an example variable, but but it applies to all the variables with the subscript t in the system of equations. I've listed the unknowns above.
    $endgroup$
    – Hariharan
    Jan 8 at 9:05






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    The variables are normalized, so if you want $Q_{t+1}=Q_t$, wouldn't $widetilde{Q}_{t+1} = frac{Q_{t+1}}{Q_t} = 1$?
    $endgroup$
    – Dylan
    Jan 8 at 9:35












  • $begingroup$
    @Dylan You're a genius. That was quite silly of me! Thanks!
    $endgroup$
    – Hariharan
    Jan 8 at 9:58






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Seems to me that $tau_l$ and $tau_k$ are policy instruments. The definition of equilibrium takes them as given. You then look for $tau_l$ and $tau_k$ that solve some objective of the planner/government.
    $endgroup$
    – Mdoc
    Jan 10 at 6:39
















0












$begingroup$


I am not sure if I am thick in the head or not, but I am trying to replicate this paper: https://www.nber.org/papers/w19086.pdf. The equations characterising the equilibrium are given on Page $22$.



Unfortunately it seems as though there are 7 unknowns but only 6 equations (well I am trying to calculate the steady state, so for any time varying variable $X$ which is time varying $X_{t+1} = X_t = X$ and thats how it becomes only 7 unknowns.)



The unknowns are:
$widetilde{K}, widetilde{Q}, widetilde{C}, widetilde{Y},tau_k,tau_l and L$



I am omitting the time subscripts because I am trying to solve for the steady state, so again, variables are constant through time.



I tried going through the paper again and how we got to the equations but to no avail. I may be missing something super basic here but any help would be great!










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    What are the unknowns? $K,Q,C,Y$ with subscripts $t$ and $t+1$? which variable are you referring to as $X$?
    $endgroup$
    – Dylan
    Jan 8 at 8:14












  • $begingroup$
    @Dylan Hi, I have edited in some more information into the answers. X is just an example variable, but but it applies to all the variables with the subscript t in the system of equations. I've listed the unknowns above.
    $endgroup$
    – Hariharan
    Jan 8 at 9:05






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    The variables are normalized, so if you want $Q_{t+1}=Q_t$, wouldn't $widetilde{Q}_{t+1} = frac{Q_{t+1}}{Q_t} = 1$?
    $endgroup$
    – Dylan
    Jan 8 at 9:35












  • $begingroup$
    @Dylan You're a genius. That was quite silly of me! Thanks!
    $endgroup$
    – Hariharan
    Jan 8 at 9:58






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Seems to me that $tau_l$ and $tau_k$ are policy instruments. The definition of equilibrium takes them as given. You then look for $tau_l$ and $tau_k$ that solve some objective of the planner/government.
    $endgroup$
    – Mdoc
    Jan 10 at 6:39














0












0








0





$begingroup$


I am not sure if I am thick in the head or not, but I am trying to replicate this paper: https://www.nber.org/papers/w19086.pdf. The equations characterising the equilibrium are given on Page $22$.



Unfortunately it seems as though there are 7 unknowns but only 6 equations (well I am trying to calculate the steady state, so for any time varying variable $X$ which is time varying $X_{t+1} = X_t = X$ and thats how it becomes only 7 unknowns.)



The unknowns are:
$widetilde{K}, widetilde{Q}, widetilde{C}, widetilde{Y},tau_k,tau_l and L$



I am omitting the time subscripts because I am trying to solve for the steady state, so again, variables are constant through time.



I tried going through the paper again and how we got to the equations but to no avail. I may be missing something super basic here but any help would be great!










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$




I am not sure if I am thick in the head or not, but I am trying to replicate this paper: https://www.nber.org/papers/w19086.pdf. The equations characterising the equilibrium are given on Page $22$.



Unfortunately it seems as though there are 7 unknowns but only 6 equations (well I am trying to calculate the steady state, so for any time varying variable $X$ which is time varying $X_{t+1} = X_t = X$ and thats how it becomes only 7 unknowns.)



The unknowns are:
$widetilde{K}, widetilde{Q}, widetilde{C}, widetilde{Y},tau_k,tau_l and L$



I am omitting the time subscripts because I am trying to solve for the steady state, so again, variables are constant through time.



I tried going through the paper again and how we got to the equations but to no avail. I may be missing something super basic here but any help would be great!







ordinary-differential-equations economics steady-state






share|cite|improve this question















share|cite|improve this question













share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question








edited Jan 8 at 9:20









Sauhard Sharma

953318




953318










asked Jan 8 at 7:47









HariharanHariharan

312




312












  • $begingroup$
    What are the unknowns? $K,Q,C,Y$ with subscripts $t$ and $t+1$? which variable are you referring to as $X$?
    $endgroup$
    – Dylan
    Jan 8 at 8:14












  • $begingroup$
    @Dylan Hi, I have edited in some more information into the answers. X is just an example variable, but but it applies to all the variables with the subscript t in the system of equations. I've listed the unknowns above.
    $endgroup$
    – Hariharan
    Jan 8 at 9:05






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    The variables are normalized, so if you want $Q_{t+1}=Q_t$, wouldn't $widetilde{Q}_{t+1} = frac{Q_{t+1}}{Q_t} = 1$?
    $endgroup$
    – Dylan
    Jan 8 at 9:35












  • $begingroup$
    @Dylan You're a genius. That was quite silly of me! Thanks!
    $endgroup$
    – Hariharan
    Jan 8 at 9:58






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Seems to me that $tau_l$ and $tau_k$ are policy instruments. The definition of equilibrium takes them as given. You then look for $tau_l$ and $tau_k$ that solve some objective of the planner/government.
    $endgroup$
    – Mdoc
    Jan 10 at 6:39


















  • $begingroup$
    What are the unknowns? $K,Q,C,Y$ with subscripts $t$ and $t+1$? which variable are you referring to as $X$?
    $endgroup$
    – Dylan
    Jan 8 at 8:14












  • $begingroup$
    @Dylan Hi, I have edited in some more information into the answers. X is just an example variable, but but it applies to all the variables with the subscript t in the system of equations. I've listed the unknowns above.
    $endgroup$
    – Hariharan
    Jan 8 at 9:05






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    The variables are normalized, so if you want $Q_{t+1}=Q_t$, wouldn't $widetilde{Q}_{t+1} = frac{Q_{t+1}}{Q_t} = 1$?
    $endgroup$
    – Dylan
    Jan 8 at 9:35












  • $begingroup$
    @Dylan You're a genius. That was quite silly of me! Thanks!
    $endgroup$
    – Hariharan
    Jan 8 at 9:58






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Seems to me that $tau_l$ and $tau_k$ are policy instruments. The definition of equilibrium takes them as given. You then look for $tau_l$ and $tau_k$ that solve some objective of the planner/government.
    $endgroup$
    – Mdoc
    Jan 10 at 6:39
















$begingroup$
What are the unknowns? $K,Q,C,Y$ with subscripts $t$ and $t+1$? which variable are you referring to as $X$?
$endgroup$
– Dylan
Jan 8 at 8:14






$begingroup$
What are the unknowns? $K,Q,C,Y$ with subscripts $t$ and $t+1$? which variable are you referring to as $X$?
$endgroup$
– Dylan
Jan 8 at 8:14














$begingroup$
@Dylan Hi, I have edited in some more information into the answers. X is just an example variable, but but it applies to all the variables with the subscript t in the system of equations. I've listed the unknowns above.
$endgroup$
– Hariharan
Jan 8 at 9:05




$begingroup$
@Dylan Hi, I have edited in some more information into the answers. X is just an example variable, but but it applies to all the variables with the subscript t in the system of equations. I've listed the unknowns above.
$endgroup$
– Hariharan
Jan 8 at 9:05




1




1




$begingroup$
The variables are normalized, so if you want $Q_{t+1}=Q_t$, wouldn't $widetilde{Q}_{t+1} = frac{Q_{t+1}}{Q_t} = 1$?
$endgroup$
– Dylan
Jan 8 at 9:35






$begingroup$
The variables are normalized, so if you want $Q_{t+1}=Q_t$, wouldn't $widetilde{Q}_{t+1} = frac{Q_{t+1}}{Q_t} = 1$?
$endgroup$
– Dylan
Jan 8 at 9:35














$begingroup$
@Dylan You're a genius. That was quite silly of me! Thanks!
$endgroup$
– Hariharan
Jan 8 at 9:58




$begingroup$
@Dylan You're a genius. That was quite silly of me! Thanks!
$endgroup$
– Hariharan
Jan 8 at 9:58




1




1




$begingroup$
Seems to me that $tau_l$ and $tau_k$ are policy instruments. The definition of equilibrium takes them as given. You then look for $tau_l$ and $tau_k$ that solve some objective of the planner/government.
$endgroup$
– Mdoc
Jan 10 at 6:39




$begingroup$
Seems to me that $tau_l$ and $tau_k$ are policy instruments. The definition of equilibrium takes them as given. You then look for $tau_l$ and $tau_k$ that solve some objective of the planner/government.
$endgroup$
– Mdoc
Jan 10 at 6:39










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