2,033 results
Search Results
2. The Commercial Paper Market, the Fed, and the 2007-2009 Financial Crisis.
- Author
-
Anderson, Richard G. and Gascon, Charles S.
- Subjects
- *
COMMERCIAL paper issues , *GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 , *MARKET failure , *MONEY market funds , *LIQUIDITY (Economics) - Abstract
Since its inception in the early nineteenth century, the U.S. commercial paper market has grown to become a key source of short-term funding for major businesses, with issuance averaging over $100 billion per day. In the fall of 2008, the commercial paper market achieved national prominence when increasing market stress caused some to fear that, given its size and importance, the market's failure would sharply worsen the recession. The Department of the Treasury and Federal Reserve enacted programs targeted at providing credit and liquidity to restore investor confidence. The authors review the history of the commercial paper market, describe its structure and key relationships to money market mutual funds, and present a detailed discussion of the crisis in the market, including the resulting Federal Reserve programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Working Paper Series, 2003.
- Subjects
- *
WORKING papers , *FEDERAL Reserve banks , *FEDERAL Reserve monetary policy , *CENTRAL banking industry , *MONETARY policy - Abstract
Presents a list of working papers from the Federal Reserve Bank of Saint Louis, Missouri in 2003. "Asymmetric Common Trends: An Application of Monetary Policy in a Markov-Switching VECM," by Neville Francis and Michael T. Owyang; "FOMC Forecasts: Is All the Information in the Central Tendency?," by William T. Gavin; "Does Consumer Sentiment Predict Regional Consumption?," by Thomas A. Garrett.
- Published
- 2003
4. CONFERENCE OVERVIEW AND SUMMARY OF PAPERS.
- Author
-
Morgan, Donald P. and Mishkin, Frederic S.
- Subjects
- *
CONFERENCES & conventions , *BANKING industry , *DISCLOSURE , *STOCK prices , *MARKET volatility - Abstract
Presents an overview and summary of papers presented at the conference held at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York which tackled issues regarding disclosure and market discipline in the banking industry. Interaction between supervisor examinations and market discipline; Relationship between bank disclosure and stock price volatility; Indicators for the determination of troubled banks.
- Published
- 2004
5. Pulp Friction.
- Author
-
Clement, Douglas
- Subjects
PAPER industry ,MERGERS & acquisitions - Abstract
Deals with the consolidation of the paper industry in the United States. Factors that contributed to the merger trend in the paper industry; Profitability of consolidating the industry; Concern on the cultural change created by consolidation. INSET: A DECADE OF DEALS.
- Published
- 2001
6. The evolution of the U.S. commercial paper market since 1980.
- Author
-
Post, Mitchell A. and Schoenbeck, Michael A.
- Subjects
- *
TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY of the banking industry - Abstract
Studies the changes in the United States commercial paper market since 1980. Five-fold growth since 1979; Development of the swaps market; Growth of money market mutual funds; Changes in area of services of banks to the commercial paper market; Sources of growth in the 1980s; Movements in interest rates; Economic expansion.
- Published
- 1992
7. Working paper series.
- Subjects
- *
GOVERNMENT paperwork - Abstract
Lists the working papers from the Federal Reserve Bank of Saint Louis, Missouri containing preliminary results of staff research from 1991 to 1996. Includes `Discount Rate Policies of Five Federal Reserve Chairman,' by Daniel L. Thornton; `Dependent Children and Aged Parents: Funding Education and Social Security in an Aging Economy,' by Patricia S. Pollard and Rowena A. Pecchenino.
- Published
- 1996
8. CAPITAL-SKILL COMPLEMENTARITY IN MANUFACTURING: LESSONS FROM THE US SHALE BOOM.
- Author
-
Martinez, Victor Hernandez
- Subjects
MANUFACTURING industries ,CAPITAL investments ,LABOR market ,OIL shale economics - Abstract
This paper tests the existence of capital-skill complementarity in the manufacturing sector using quasi-experimental increases in the relative price of low-skill labor induced by the US shale boom. I find that in response to the shale boom, local manufacturing firms decreased their relative usage of low-skill labor while increasing their capital expenditures. These endogenous changes in the input mix allowed manufacturers to maintain the value added despite the increase in the price of low-skill labor, avoiding the potential short-term crowding-out effects of the natural resource boom. Combined with the findings of previous work, my results indicate that the degree of skill substitutable with capital in manufacturing has increased over the last several decades. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Summary of Papers Presented at the Conference "Models and Monetary Policy: Research in the Tradition of Dale Henderson, Richard Porter, and Peter Tinsley"
- Author
-
Faust, Jon, Orphanides, Athanasios, and Reifschneider, David L.
- Subjects
- *
MONETARY policy , *ECONOMIC models , *MONEY , *PRICES - Abstract
Discusses the application of economic models to the analysis of monetary policy issues in the U.S. Influence of economic uncertainty on policymaking; Role of money in the transmission of monetary policy; Determination of asset prices.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Interest rate risk at US credit unions.
- Author
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Rosenberger, Grant and Zimmerman, Peter
- Subjects
CREDIT unions ,INTEREST rates ,BANK assets ,HEDGE funds - Abstract
Rising interest rates have prompted concerns about losses on bank assets, especially following the failure of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) in March 2023. In this working paper, we examine whether US credit unions could be subject to similar losses as banks and analyze how their regulatory capital would be affected. We estimate that after realizing losses from assets that have decreased in value and not yet been sold the overall net worth of the credit union industry would have fallen by 40 percent in 2023:Q1. Unrealized losses were most severe at the largest credit unions. Nonetheless, the bulk of deposits at credit unions were insured, suggesting limited risk of an SVB-style run. In addition, credit union deposit rates are relatively insensitive to market interest rates, providing credit unions with a hedge against a rising rate environment. Overall, credit unions' balance sheet positions seemed to be more resilient to unrealized interest rate risk than banks'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The Glass Ceiling and the Paper Floor: Gender Differences among Top Earners, 1981-2012.
- Author
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Guvenen, Fatih, Kaplan, Greg, and Jae Song
- Subjects
INCOME inequality ,GENDER differences (Psychology) ,LABOR supply ,PERCENTILES - Abstract
We analyze changes in the gender structure at the top of the earnings distribution in the United States over the last 30 years using a 10% sample of individual earnings histories from the Social Security Administration. Despite making large inroads, females still constitute a small proportion of the top percentiles: the glass ceiling, albeit a thinner one, remains. We measure the contribution of changes in labor force participation, changes in the persistence of top earnings, and changes in industry and age composition to the change in the gender composition of top earners. A large proportion of the increased share of females among top earners is accounted for by the mending of, what we refer to as, the paper floor - the phenomenon whereby female top earners were much more likely than male top earners to drop out of the top percentiles. We also provide new evidence at the top of the earnings distribution for both genders: the rising share of top earnings accruing to workers in the Finance and Insurance industry, the relative transitory status of top earners, the emergence of top earnings gender gaps over the life cycle, and gender differences among lifetime top earners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
12. The Distributional Predictive Content of Measures of Inflation Expectations.
- Author
-
Mitchell, James and Zaman, Saeed
- Subjects
PRICE inflation ,QUANTILE regression ,FINANCIAL markets ,HOUSEHOLDS - Abstract
This paper examines the predictive relationship between the distribution of realized inflation in the US and measures of inflation expectations from households, firms, financial markets, and professional forecasters. To allow for nonlinearities in the predictive relationship we use quantile regression methods. We find that the ability of households to predict future inflation, relative to that of professionals, firms, and the market, increases with inflation. While professional forecasters are more accurate in the middle of the inflation density, households' expectations are more useful in the upper tail. The predictive ability of measures of inflation expectations is greatest when combined. We show that it is helpful to let the combination weights on different agents' expectations of inflation vary by quantile when assessing inflationary pressures probabilistically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Summary of Activities 2012.
- Subjects
RESEARCH institutes ,MONETARY policy ,GLOBALIZATION ,ECONOMIC development ,INTERNATIONAL economic relations ,WORKING papers - Abstract
The article discusses the activities of the Texas-based Globalization and Monetary Policy Institute in 2012. The major activities of the institute include informing Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas president Richard Fisher and other senior bank officials of global economic developments and their impact on U.S. monetary policy. The institute also circulated 134 working papers including "Core Import Price Inflation in the U.S.," and organized two conferences.
- Published
- 2013
14. State Appropriations and Employment at Higher Education Institutions.
- Author
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Hinrichs, Peter L.
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,PUBLIC spending ,INSTRUMENTAL variables (Statistics) - Abstract
This paper studies the impacts of state appropriations on staffing and salaries at public higher education institutions in the United States using employment and revenue data from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System, along with an instrumental variables strategy borrowed from Deming and Walters (2018) and Chakrabarti, Gorton, and Lovenheim (2020). The instrument sidesteps the potential endogeneity of state appropriations for a given institution in a given year by interacting an institution's historical reliance on state appropriations with total state appropriations for all higher education institutions in a given year. The results suggest that higher state appropriations are associated with an increase in tenure-track assistant professors at four-year institutions. They are also associated with an increase in part-time instructional staff at both four-year and two-year institutions. However, they are not associated with a change in the number of tenured faculty. Appropriations are also positively related to salaries for a variety of employee groups, although notably not for instructional staff who are instructors, lecturers, or without an academic rank. Overall, the results show that public higher education institutions use state appropriations in a variety of ways, but I do not find evidence that they replace contingent faculty with tenured or tenure-track faculty when appropriations rise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Statements to the Congress.
- Author
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Kelley Jr., Edward W.
- Subjects
- *
DOLLAR coins , *PAPER money , *BANK notes - Abstract
Presents a Federal Reserve System Board of Governors Member's July 1995 statement expressing the Board's views on the S.874 proposal which provides for the substitution of a one dollar coin for the one dollar bank note in circulation. Benefits and costs of making the replacement; Budget and accounting processes for notes and coins; Pitfalls of not withdrawing the note from circulation.
- Published
- 1995
16. CRE Redevelopment Options and the Use of Mortgage Financing.
- Author
-
Glancy, David, Kurtzman, Robert, and Loewenstein, Lara
- Subjects
COMMERCIAL real estate ,MORTGAGES ,COVID-19 pandemic ,REAL estate development - Abstract
A significant share of commercial real estate (CRE) investment properties--about half by our estimates--are purchased without a mortgage. Using comprehensive microdata on transactions in the US CRE market, we analyze which types of properties are purchased without a mortgage, highlighting the important role of renovation or redevelopment options. We show that mortgage-financed properties are less likely to be subsequently redeveloped, and that owners anticipate these redevelopment frictions and avoid mortgage financing for properties with greater redevelopment options. These effects were even stronger during the COVID-19 pandemic, when uncertainty increased redevelopment option values. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. COMMERCIAL PAPER OUTSTANDING.
- Subjects
- *
NEGOTIABLE instruments , *COMMERCIAL paper issues , *FINANCIAL institutions , *CHARTS, diagrams, etc. - Abstract
Presents a chart depicting the commercial paper outstanding of the financial institutions in the U.S. as of June 2005.
- Published
- 2005
18. Issuance by the Basel Committee of papers providing guidance on credit risk in banking.
- Subjects
- *
CREDIT management , *MANAGEMENT of bank loans - Abstract
Announces the issuance by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision of four papers providing guidance to banks and banking supervisors on various aspects of credit risk in banking. Sound practices for loan accounting and disclosure; Principles for the management of credit risk; Best practices for credit risk disclosure; Guidance for managing settlement risk in foreign exchange transactions.
- Published
- 1999
19. Oil Price Fluctuations and US Banks.
- Author
-
Gelain, Paolo, Lorusso, Marco, and Zaman, Saeed
- Subjects
PETROLEUM sales & prices ,BANK loans ,ECONOMIC activity ,BAYESIAN analysis - Abstract
We document a sizable effect of oil price fluctuations on US banking variables by estimating an SVAR with sign restrictions as in Baumeister and Hamilton (2019). We find that oil market shocks that lead to a contraction in world economic activity unambiguously lower the amount of bank credit to the US economy, tend to decrease US banks' net worth, and tend to increase the US credit spread. The effects can be strong and long-lasting, or more modest and short-lived, depending on the source of the oil price fluctuations. The effects are stronger for smaller and lower leveraged banks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Is the discount window necessary? A Penn Central perspective.
- Author
-
Calomiris, Charles W.
- Subjects
CREDIT management ,BANKING industry finance ,NEGOTIABLE instruments - Abstract
Argues that the discount window, properly administered, can help the government direct temporary credit subsidies through the banking system to firms suffering from a panic in nonbank financial market. Commercial paper crisis of the 1970; Penn Central as an example of a beneficial discount window intervention; Stabilizing effect of the discount window on nonbank financial market.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. $ money and art.
- Author
-
Shell, Marc
- Subjects
- *
PAPER money - Abstract
Focuses on the issue of representation in the use of paper money in the United States. Substance of money; Creation of representations; Paper money art work as a characteristically American art form; Process of exchange.
- Published
- 1992
22. The Effect of Local Economic Shocks on Local and National Elections.
- Author
-
Herreno, Juan, Morales, Matías, and Pedemonte, Mathieu
- Subjects
ECONOMIC shock ,ECONOMIC activity ,MONETARY policy ,ECONOMIC voting - Abstract
We study the reaction of voters to shifts in local economic conditions. Using the departure from the gold standard of US trading partners in 1931 and the US in 1933, we exploit heterogeneity in export destinations, creating local differences in expenditure-switching in US counties by isolating the aggregate effects of the monetary shocks using time fixed effects. We find significant changes in local voting behavior in response to both shocks, one originating abroad, and another domestically. The response to both shocks have similar magnitude. We argue that voters punished and rewarded incumbents regardless of the shocks' origin, implying strong feedback from economic conditions to electoral outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Reconciled Estimates of Monthly GDP in the US.
- Author
-
Koop, Gary, McIntyre, Stuart, Mitchell, James, and Poon, Aubrey
- Subjects
GROSS domestic product ,INCOME ,VECTOR autoregression model ,BAYESIAN analysis - Abstract
In the US, income and expenditure-side estimates of GDP (GDP
I and GDPE ) measure "true" GDP with error and are available at a quarterly frequency. Methods exist for using these proxies to produce reconciled quarterly estimates of true GDP. In this paper, we extend these methods to provide reconciled historical true GDP estimates at a monthly frequency. We do this using a Bayesian mixed frequency vector autoregression (MF-VAR) involving GDPE , GDPI , unobserved true GDP, and monthly indicators of short-term economic activity. Our MF-VAR imposes restrictions that reect a measurement-error perspective (that is, the two GDP proxies are assumed to equal true GDP plus measurement error). Without further restrictions, our model is unidentified. We consider a range of restrictions that allow for point and set identification of true GDP and show that they lead to informative monthly GDP estimates. We illustrate how these new monthly data contribute to our historical understanding of business cycles and we provide a real-time application nowcasting monthly GDP over the pandemic recession. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Paper companies feel impact of weak economy, but look to future.
- Author
-
Cobb, Kathy
- Subjects
PAPER industry ,ECONOMIC history - Abstract
Discusses the impact of the weak national economy for the third quarter of 1991 on paper companies in Minnesota. Poor financial performance of paper companies for the quarter; Decline of consumer spending; Demand for paper for catalog production.
- Published
- 1992
25. Financial Markets.
- Subjects
FINANCIAL crises ,FINANCIAL markets ,COMMERCIAL paper issue ratings & rankings ,PROMISSORY notes ,PRIME rate - Abstract
The article presents statistics related to the U.S. financial markets. One of the tables provide details related to commercial paper outstanding. Another table provides the prime rate charged by banks as far as short-term business loans are concerned. Table showing interest rates of money and capital markets have been highlighted.
- Published
- 2005
26. Working Papers Series Abstracts.
- Subjects
- *
TAXATION , *CLIMATE change , *MONETARY policy ,UNITED States economy, 2001-2009 - Abstract
The article presents abstracts on economic topics including "Tax Competition Among U.S. States: Racing to the Bottom or Riding on a Seesaw?," by Robert Chirinko and Daniel Wilson, "Imperfect Knowledge and the Pitfalls of Optimal Control Monetary Policy," by Athanasios Orphanides and John C. William, "Climate Change and Asset Prices: Hedonic Estimates for North American Ski Resorts," by Van Butsic and colleagues.
- Published
- 2009
27. Working Papers Series Abstracts.
- Subjects
- *
MONETARY policy , *SMALL business loans , *SMALL business , *INCOME ,UNITED States economy - Abstract
The article presents abstracts on the U.S. economic research which includes the implications of countervailing effects of market power and relationships in small business lending, examination on the welfare-maximizing monetary policy in micro-founded general equilibrium model of the economy and the theory of interpersonal income comparison using individual-level data on suicide deaths.
- Published
- 2008
28. The Impact of the Age Distribution on Unemployment: Evidence from US States.
- Author
-
Fallick, Bruce and Foote, Christopher L.
- Subjects
AGE distribution ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,DEMOGRAPHIC surveys ,ECONOMISTS - Abstract
Economists have studied the potential effects of shifts in the age distribution on the unemployment rate for more than 50 years. Most of this analysis uses a "shift-share" method, which assumes that the demographic structure has no indirect effects on age-specific unemployment rates. This paper uses state-level data to revisit the inuence of the age distribution on unemployment in the United States. We examine demographic effects across the entire age distribution rather than just the youth share of the population|the focus of most previous work|and extend the date range of analysis beyond that which was available for previous research. We find that shifts in the age distribution move the unemployment rate in the direction that a mechanical shift-share model would predict. But these effects are larger than the mechanical model would generate, indicating the presence of amplifying indirect effects of the age distribution on unemployment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Working Papers Series Abstracts.
- Subjects
- *
MONETARY policy , *PRICE inflation , *BUDGET deficits - Abstract
The article presents abstracts of economic research. They include "Monetary Policy Shocks, Inventory Dynamics and Price-setting Behavior," "Does Inflation Targeting Anchor Long-Run Inflation Expectations? Evidence from Long-Term Bond Yields in the U.S., U.K. and Sweden," and "The U.S. Current Account Deficit and the Expected Share of World Output."
- Published
- 2007
30. News flash: Small-market papers prosper.
- Author
-
Mahon, Joe
- Subjects
NEWSPAPERS ,NEWSPAPER publishing ,NEWSPAPER advertising - Abstract
The article reports on the newspaper industry in the U.S. It reveals that McClatchy Co. acquired Knight-Ridder in 2006. Comments from Dan Hayes of Lee Enterprises are included. Advertising is important to the success of a newspaper business. National daily newspaper circulation fell in 2004, according to the Newspaper Association of America.
- Published
- 2007
31. Opioids and the Labor Market.
- Author
-
Aliprantis, Dionissi, Fee, Kyle, and Schweitzer, Mark E.
- Subjects
LABOR market ,OPIOIDS ,ECONOMIC activity ,ROBUST control ,LABOR supply - Abstract
This paper quantifies the relationship between local opioid prescription rates and labor market outcomes in the United States between 2006 and 2016. To understand this relationship at the national level, we assemble a data set that allows us both to include rural areas and to estimate the relationship at a disaggregated level. We control for geographic variation in both short-term and long-term economic conditions. In our preferred specification, a 10 percent higher local prescription rate is associated with a lower prime-age labor force participation rate of 0.53 percentage points for men and 0.10 percentage points for women. We focus on measuring the impact of opioid prescriptions on labor markets, so we evaluate the robustness of our estimates to an alternative causal path, unobserved selection, and an instrumental variable from the literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Downward Nominal Wage Rigidity in the United States during and after the Great Recession.
- Author
-
Fallick, Bruce, Villar, Daniel, and Wascher, William
- Subjects
WAGES ,RECESSIONS ,LABOR market ,WAGE surveys - Abstract
Rigidity in wages has long been thought to impede the functioning of labor markets. In this paper, we investigate the extent of downward nominal wage rigidity in US labor markets using job-level data from a nationally representative establishment-based compensation survey collected by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. We use several distinct methods to test for downward nominal wage rigidity and to assess whether such rigidity is less or more severe in the presence of negative economic shocks than in more normal economic times. We find a significant amount of downward nominal wage rigidity in the United States and no evidence that the high degree of labor market distress during the Great Recession reduced downward nominal wage rigidity. We further find a lower degree of nominal rigidity at multi-year horizons. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Commentary.
- Author
-
Mishkin, Frederic S.
- Subjects
UNITED States economy ,ECONOMIC indicators - Abstract
Opinion. Comments on the paper by Jerome Stein about the Federal Reserve's role in improving the economic condition of the United States. Function of the M2 aggregate as a monetary indicator to guide monetary policy; Federal Reserve's achievement of price stability; Relationship between M2 growth and a particular economic variable; Interpretation of evidence on monetary indicators.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. On Commercial Construction Activity’s Long and Variable Lags.
- Author
-
Glancy, David, Kurtzman, Robert, and Loewenstein, Lara
- Subjects
CONSTRUCTION projects ,CONSTRUCTION planning ,COMMERCIAL real estate ,CITIES & towns - Abstract
We use microdata on the phases of commercial construction projects to document three facts regarding time-to-plan lags: (1) plan times are long—about 1.5 years—and highly variable, (2) roughly 40 percent of projects are abandoned in planning, and (3) property price appreciation reduces the likelihood of abandonment. We construct a model with endogenous planning starts and abandonment that matches these facts. The model has the testable implication that supply is more elastic when there are more “shovel ready” projects available to advance to construction. We use local projections to validate that this prediction holds in the cross-section for US cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Five Years of Research on Globalization and Monetary Policy: What Have We Learned?
- Author
-
Wynne, Mark
- Subjects
FINANCIAL services industry ,GLOBALIZATION ,PRICE inflation ,COST of living - Abstract
The author discusses the developments in the global financial sector, particularly in the U.S. He examines the performance of the Globalization and Monetary Policy Institute that was created by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas in 2008. He focuses on the effects of globalization on such financial factors as inflation and standards of living.
- Published
- 2013
36. Accounting for job loss.
- Author
-
Clement, Douglas
- Subjects
CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,EMPLOYMENT ,RECESSIONS ,WORKING papers - Abstract
In this article, the author discusses research which developed a theory that is able to account analytically for U.S. consumption and employment patterns experienced during the 2008-2009 Great Recession. It references the Minneapolis Fed Working Paper 703, "The Stolper-Samuelson Effects of a Decline in Aggregate Consumption," authored by Fed consultant Erzo G. J. Luttmer and published online at minneapolisfed.org. The article also discusses how Luttmer supported his theory.
- Published
- 2013
37. Paper or Plastic? The Potential Impact of Prepaid Cards on Personal Financial Management.
- Author
-
Morgan, Lesley
- Subjects
STORED-value cards ,FINANCIAL services industry ,FINANCIAL institutions ,ELECTRONIC funds transfers - Abstract
The article reports on the impact of prepaid cards in the financial services industry in the U.S. It is highlighted that prepaid cards can help fill the gap between the cash and the cashless segments of society that now exist. Details on the functions of prepaid cards on financial institutions are also shown. INSET: Sample Potential Savings Using Prepaid.
- Published
- 2012
38. Urban Transportation and Inter-Jurisdictional Competition.
- Author
-
Pinto, Santiago M.
- Subjects
URBAN transportation ,JURISDICTION ,TRANSPORTATION ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,FINANCING of transportation ,PLANNING - Abstract
It is well-known that competition for factors of production, including competition for residents, affects the public services provided in the communities. This paper considers the determination of local investment in urban transport systems. Many specialists question the effectiveness of the current U.S. top-to-bottom transportation institutional arrangement in which the federal government plays a dominant role and recommend a shift toward a decentralized organization. We examine how such a shift would affect the levels of transport investment. Specifically, we consider a model of two cities, and assume, as in Brueckner and Selod (2006), that transport systems are characterized by different time and money costs. We compare the outcomes reached when the transport system is decided by a central authority (a state or federal government) to the one decided by each jurisdiction in a decentralized way. In the latter case, city or local transportation authorities choose the system that maximizes residents' welfare, taking as given the decisions made elsewhere, essentially competing for residents (or workers). Our analysis shows that even though a shift toward a decentralized arrangement of the transportation system would generally lead to overinvestment (relative to the centralized case), the extent of this bias depends on the specific factors that drive transport authorities in deciding the transportation system, on the landownership structure, and on the financing arrangements in place. The paper also shows that, in a more general setup, when the two cities differ in their productivity levels, the more productive city will tend to overinvest in transportation systems that connect the two cities, and the less productive city will tend to underinvest in those systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
39. Cross-Sectional Patterns of Mortgage Debt during the Housing Boom: Evidence and Implications.
- Author
-
Foote, Christopher L., Loewenstein, Lara, and Willen, Paul S.
- Subjects
MORTGAGE loans ,HOUSING ,HOME prices ,ECONOMIC shock ,INTEREST rates ,REAL estate business ,SUBPRIME mortgages - Abstract
In this paper, we use two comprehensive micro datasets to study the evolution of the distribution of mortgage debt during the 2000s housing boom. We show that the allocation of mortgage debt remained stable, as did the distribution of real estate assets. We propose that any theory of the boom must replicate this fact. Using a general equilibrium model, we show that this requires two elements: (1) an exogenous shock to the economy that increases expected house price growth or, alternatively, reduces interest rates and (2) financial markets that endogenously relax constraints in response to the shock. The role played by subprime mortgage debt provides additional empirical evidence that this narrative mirrors reality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
40. More Unequal We Stand? Inequality Dynamics in the United States, 1967-2021.
- Author
-
Heathcote, Jonathan, Violante, Giovanni L., Perri, Fabrizio, and Lichen Zhang
- Subjects
GENDER wage gap ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,INCOME inequality ,DISPOSABLE income ,FAMILY roles - Abstract
Heathcote et al. (2010) conducted an empirical analysis of several dimensions of inequality in the United States over the years 1967-2006, using publicly-available survey data. This paper expands the analysis, and extends it to 2021. We find that since the early 2000s, the college wage premium has stopped growing, and the race wage gap has stalled. However, the gender wage gap has kept shrinking. Both individual- and household-level income inequality have continued to rise at the top, while the cyclical component of inequality dominates dynamics below the median. Inequality in consumption expenditures has remained remarkably stable over time. Income pooling within the family and redistribution by the government have enormous impacts on the dynamics of household-level inequality, with the role of the family diminishing and that of the government growing over time. In particular, largely due to generous government transfers, the COVID recession has been the first downturn in fifty years in which inequality in disposable income and consumption actually declined. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Perspectives on the Labor Share.
- Author
-
Karabarbounis, Loukas
- Subjects
LABOR market ,GREAT Depression, 1929-1939 ,CAPITAL market ,MACROECONOMICS - Abstract
As of 2022, the share of U.S. income accruing to labor is at its lowest level since the Great Depression. Updating previous studies with more recent observations, I document the continuing decline of the labor share for the United States, other countries, and various industries. I discuss how changes in technology and product, labor, and capital markets affect the trend of the labor share. I also examine its relationship with other macroeconomic trends, such as rising markups, higher concentration of economic activity, and globalization. I conclude by offering some perspectives on the economic and policy implications of the labor share decline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The Prospect of Higher Taxes and Weak Job Growth During the Recovery from The Great Recession: Macro versus Micro Frisch Elasticities.
- Author
-
Zarazagay, Carlos E. J. M.
- Subjects
LABOR supply ,GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 ,FINANCIAL crises ,UNITED States economy, 2001-2009 ,MARKET volatility - Abstract
Labor input growth during the recovery of the U.S. economy from the Great Recession of 2008-2009 has been considerably lower than expected. A number of scholars have attributed this disappointing outcome to the prospect of higher taxes, induced by the fiscal imbalances that will materialize in coming decades under current policies. The paper examines this fiscal sentiment hypothesis from the perspective of a neoclassical growth model, under the assumption that the typical household's preferences can be represented by a utility function that implies a constant intertemporal (Frisch) elasticity of substitution for aggregate hours of work, and for a hypothetical tax regime that incorporates the Congressional Budget Office's assessment of the U.S. fiscal situation. The paper finds that the empirical relevance of the fiscal sentiment hypothesis depends on whether this Frisch elasticity of labor supply is closer to the relatively large values needed to account for the observed volatility of labor input at business cycle frequencies, than to the lower values estimated by microeconomic and quasi-experimental studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
43. Internal Migration in the United States: A Comparative Assessment of the Utility of the Consumer Credit Panel.
- Author
-
DeWaard, Jack, Johnson, Janna E., and Whitaker, Stephan D.
- Subjects
CONSUMER credit ,INTERNAL migration ,SOCIAL surveys ,DEMOGRAPHIC surveys - Abstract
This paper demonstrates that credit bureau data, such as the Federal Reserve Bank of New York Consumer Credit Panel/Equifax (CCP), can be used to study internal migration in the United States. It is comparable to, and in some ways superior to, the standard data used to study migration, including the American Community Survey (ACS), the Current Population Survey (CPS), and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) county-to-county migration data. CCP-based estimates of migration intensity, connectivity, and spatial focusing are similar to estimates derived from the ACS, CPS, and IRS data. The CCP can measure block-to-block migration and it is available at quarterly rather than annual frequencies. Migrants' precise origins are not available in public versions of the ACS, CPS, or IRS data. We report measures of migration from the CCP data at finer geographies and time intervals. Finally, we disaggregate migration flows into first-, second-, and higher-order moves. Individual-level panels in the CCP make this possible, giving the CCP an additional advantage over the ACS, CPS, or publicly available IRS data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. PEAS IN A POD? COMPARING THE U.S. AND DANISH MORTGAGE FINANCE SYSTEMS.
- Author
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Berg, Jesper, Nielsen, Morten Baekmand, and Vickery, James
- Subjects
MORTGAGE loans ,HOUSING finance ,MORTGAGE banks ,COVERED bonds (Finance) ,CREDIT risk ,INTEREST rate risk ,PREPAYMENT of debts ,GOVERNMENT guaranty of loans - Abstract
The article compares the U.S. and Danish mortgage finance systems. It examines the implications of the structures of the Danish mortgage market for U.S. housing finance reform, including the fact that Danish mortgage banks issue covered bonds collateralized by mortgage loans on a match funded basis. The mortgage credit risk and the interest rate and prepayment risk facing Danish mortgage banks are discussed, as well as the absence an explicit government guarantee in the Danish mortgage market.
- Published
- 2018
45. Drifts, Volatilities, and Impulse Responses Over the Last Century.
- Author
-
Amir-Ahmadi, Pooyan, Matthes, Christian, and Mu-Chun Wang
- Subjects
MARKET volatility ,IMPULSE response ,MONETARY policy ,VECTOR autoregression model ,GROWTH rate ,HISTORY of economics - Abstract
How much have the dynamics of U.S. time series and in particular the transmission of innovations to monetary policy instruments changed over the last century? The answers to these questions that this paper gives are "a lot" and "probably less than you think," respectively. We use vector autoregressions with time-varying parameters and stochastic volatility to tackle these questions. In our analysis we use variables that both influenced monetary policy and in turn were influenced by monetary policy itself, including bond market data (the difference between long-term and short-term nominal interest rates) and the growth rate of money. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
46. Fiscal Sentiment and the Weak Recovery from the Great Recession: A Quantitative Exploration.
- Author
-
Kydland, Finn E. and Zarazaga, Carlos E. J. M.
- Subjects
RECESSIONS ,BUSINESS cycles ,DEPRESSIONS (Economics) ,FINANCIAL crises ,GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 - Abstract
The U.S. economy isn't recovering from the deep Great Recession of 2008-2009 with the strength predicted by models that incorporate a variety of shocks and frictions in the basic analytical framework of the neoclassical growth model. It has been argued that the counterfactual predictions shouldn't be attributed to inherent features of that framework, but to the omission from the analysis of the prospects of an imminent switch to a higher taxes regime prompted by the unprecedented fiscal challenges faced by the U.S. economy in peacetime. The paper explores quantitatively this fiscal sentiment hypothesis. The main finding is that the hypothesis can account for a substantial fraction of the decline in investment and labor input in the aftermath of the Great Recession, relative to their pre-recession trends. These results require, however, a qualification: The perceived higher taxes must fall almost exclusively on capital income. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
47. Duluth paper recycling plant opens.
- Author
-
Power, Christine and Grunewald, Robbie
- Subjects
MINORITY business enterprises - Abstract
Reports on economic conditions in Minnesota as of January 1994. Superior Recycled Fiber Industries' opening of its plant in Duluth, Minnesota; Increase in number of minority-owned businesses in Minnesota.
- Published
- 1994
48. Macroprudential Policy: Results from a Tabletop Exercise.
- Author
-
Duffy, Denise, Haubrich, Joseph G., Kovner, Anna, Musatov, Alex, Prescott, Edward Simpson, Rosen, Richard J., Tallarini Jr., Thomas D., Vardoulakis, Alexandros P., Yang, Emily, and Zlate, Andrei
- Subjects
MONETARY policy ,ECONOMICS ,COMMERCIAL real estate ,DEBT valuation - Abstract
This paper presents a tabletop exercise designed to analyze macroprudential policy. Several senior Federal Reserve officials were presented with a hypothetical economy as of 2020:Q2 in which commercial real estate and nonfinancial debt valuations were very high. After analyzing the economy and discussing the use of monetary and macroprudential policy tools, participants were then presented with a hypothetical negative shock to commercial real estate valuations that occurred in the second half of 2020. Participants then discussed the use of the tools during an incipient downturn. Some of the findings of the exercise were that during an asset boom, there were limits to the effectiveness of U.S. macroprudential tools in controlling narrow risks and that changes to the fed funds rate may not always simultaneously meet macroeconomic and financial stability goals. Some other findings were that during a downturn, it would be desirable to use high-frequency indicators for deciding when to release the countercyclical capital buffer (CCyB) and that tensions exist between microprudential and macroprudential goals when using the CCyB and the stress test. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Can Landlords Be Paid to Stop Avoiding Voucher Tenants?
- Author
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Aliprantis, Dionissi, Martin, Hal, and Phillips, David
- Subjects
LANDLORD-tenant relations ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,RENTAL housing ,RENT ,HOUSING vouchers - Abstract
Despite being eligible for use in any neighborhood, housing choice vouchers tend to be redeemed in low-opportunity neighborhoods. This paper investigates whether landlord behavior contributes to this outcome by studying the recent expansion of neighborhood-based voucher limits in Washington, DC. We conduct two waves of a correspondence experiment: one before and one after the expansion. Landlords heavily penalize tenants who indicate a desire to pay by voucher. The voucher penalty is larger in high-rent neighborhoods, pushing voucher tenants to low-rent neighborhoods. We find no evidence that indexing rents to small areas affects landlord acceptance of voucher tenants. The data can reject the claim that increasing rent limits by less than $3,000 per month can eliminate the voucher penalty. Neighborhood rent limits do shift lease-up locations toward high-rent neighborhoods in the year after the policy change, an effect that is large relative to the number of voucher households that move but small relative to all voucher tenants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Forest products taken to the woodshed.
- Author
-
WONHO CHUNG
- Subjects
HOUSING ,FOREST products ,PAPER industry - Abstract
The article explains the impact of the decline in the housing market on the forest products industry in the U.S. Ninth District. The two sectors of the forest products industry are the wood product industry and the paper industry. The author says that the housing slump decreased demand for wood products like lumber, oriented strand board, and cabinetry leading to a decrease in prices and companies such as Norcraft and Plum Creek Timber struggle in their operation.
- Published
- 2009
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