nep-cba New Economics Papers
on Central Banking
Issue of 2006‒10‒14
37 papers chosen by
Alexander Mihailov
University of Reading

  1. The New Consensus in Monetary Policy: Is the NKM fit for the purpose of inflation targeting? By Peter N. Smith; Mike Wickens
  2. Indeterminacy in a Forward Looking Regime Switching Model By Roger E. A. Farmer; Daniel F. Waggoner; Tao Zha
  3. Endogenous monetary policy regime change By Troy Davig; Eric Leeper
  4. Bank Behavior and the Cost Channel of Monetary Transmission By Oliver Hülsewig; Eric Mayer; Timo Wollmershäuser
  5. The Optimal Monetary Policy Response to Exchange Rate Misalignments By Cambell Leith; Simon Wren-Lewis
  6. What do robust policies look like for open economy inflation targeters? By Kirdan Lees
  7. Learning about the term structure and optimal rules for inflation targeting By Tesfaselassie,Mewael F.; Schaling,Eric; Eijffinger,Sylvester
  8. Expected Money Growth, Markov Trends and the Instability of Money Demand in the Euro Area By Sylvia Kaufmann; Peter Kugler
  9. Measuring the Macroeconomic Risks Posed by Asset Price Booms By Stephen G. Cecchetti
  10. Bretton Woods and the U.S. decision to intervene in the foreign-exchange market, 1957-1962 By Michael D. Bordo; Owen F. Humpage; Anna J. Schwartz
  11. The great inflation and early disinflation in Japan and Germany By Edward Nelson
  12. International Capital Flows and U.S. Interest Rates By Francis E. Warnock; Veronica Cacdac Warnock
  13. Forecasting inflation and output: comparing data-rich models with simple rules By William T. Gavin; Kevin L. Kliesen
  14. Money Velocity in an Endogenous Growth Business Cycle with Credit Shocks By Szilárd Benk; Max Gillman; Michal Kejak
  15. The anchoring of European inflation expectations By Jan Marc Berk; Gerbert Hebbink
  16. Monetary base By Richard G. Anderson
  17. Does the time inconsistency problem make flexible exchange rates look worse than you think? By Roc Armenter; Martin Bodenstein
  18. Optimal Fiscal Feedback on Debt in an Economy with Nominal Rigidities By Tatiana Kirsanova; Simon Wren-Lewis
  19. Using Taylor Rules to Assess the Relative Activism of the European Central Bank, the Bank of England and the Federal Reserve Board By David Cobham
  20. The Uneasy Case for Fractional-Reserve Free Banking By van den Hauwe, Ludwig
  21. Is there Really a Unit Root in the Inflation Rate? More Evidence from Panel Data Models By Basher, Syed A.; Westerlund, Joakim
  22. AQM-06: The Macroeconomic Model of the OeNB By Martin Schneider; Markus Leibrecht
  23. The distribution of output in integrated economies: theory and evidence By Bowen, H.P.; Munandar, H.; Viaene, J.M.
  24. Exchange Rates, Prices and International Trade in a Model of Endogenous Market Structure By Yunus Aksoy; Hanno Lustig
  25. Cointegration Tests of PPP: Do they also Exhibit Erratic Behaviour? By Guglielmo Maria Caporale; Christoph Hanck
  26. Hedge Your Costs : Exchange Rate Risk and Endogenous Currency Invoicing By Novy, Dennis
  27. The Lucas critique and the stability of empirical models By Thomas A. Lubik; Paolo Surico
  28. An economic explanation of the early Bank of Amsterdam, debasement, bills of exchange, and the emergence of the first central bank By Stephen Quinn; William Roberds
  29. Technology diffusion within central banking: the case of real-time gross settlement By Morten L. Bech; Bart Hobijn
  30. Economic growth and currency crisis: A real exchange rate entropic approach By Matesanz Gómez, David; Ortega, Guillermo J.
  31. Are Currency Appreciations Contractionary in China� By Jianhuai Shi
  32. How to advance theory with structural VARs: use the Sims-Cogley-Nason approach By Patrick J. Kehoe
  33. Exchange rate policy and trade balance. A cointegration analysis of the argentine experience since 1962. By Matesanz Gómez, David; Fugarolas Álvarez-Ude, Guadalupe
  34. International Trade and Finance under the Two Hegemons: Complementaries in the United Kingdom 1870-1913 and the United States 1920-30 By Alan M. Taylor; Janine L. F. Wilson
  35. Credit in a Tiered Payments System By Alexandra Lai; Nikil Chande; Sean O'Connor
  36. Monetary Transmission and Bank Lending in Portugal: A Sectoral Approach By José Alberto Fuinhas
  37. Non-Linear Effects of Monetary Policy and Real Exchange Rate Shocks in Partially Dollarized Economies: An Empirical Study for Peru By Saki Bigio; Jorge Salas

  1. By: Peter N. Smith; Mike Wickens
    Abstract: In this paper we examine whether or not the NKM is .t for the purpose of providing a suitable basis for the conduct of monetary policy through inflation targeting. We focus on a number of issues: the dynamic response of inflation to interest rates in a theoretical NKM under discretion and commitment to a Taylor rule; the implications for the specification of the New Keynesian Phillips equation of alternative models of imperfect competition in a closed and an open economy; the general equilibrium underpinnings of the IS function; the extent of empirical support for the NKM; what the empirical evidence on the NKM implies for inflation targeting. Our findings reveal a number of problems with the NKM. Theoretically, the NKM predicts that a discretionary increase in interest rates will increase inflation, not reduce it. This is supported by our VAR evidence. Estimates of the NKM indicate a negative relation between interest rates and inflation, but the signs in the structural equations are inconsistent with the theory. We conclude that the standard specifications of the inflation and output equations are inadequate and that these equations should be embedded in a larger model.
    Keywords: Inflation targeting, monetary policy, New Keynesian model
    JEL: E3 E5
    Date: 2006–09
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:san:cdmacp:0610&r=cba
  2. By: Roger E. A. Farmer; Daniel F. Waggoner; Tao Zha
    Abstract: This paper is about the properties of Markov switching rational expectations (MSRE) models. We present a simple monetary policy model that switches between two regimes with known transition probabilities. The first regime, treated in isolation, has a unique determinate rational expectations equilibrium and the second contains a set of indeterminate sunspot equilibria. We show that the Markov switching model, which randomizes between these two regimes, may contain a continuum of indeterminate equilibria. We provide examples of stationary sunspot equilibria and bounded sunspot equilibria which exist even when the MSRE model satisfies a 'generalized Taylor principle'. Our result suggests that it may be more difficult to rule out non-fundamental equilibria in MRSE models than in the single regime case where the Taylor principle is known to guarantee local uniqueness.
    JEL: E31 E4 E52
    Date: 2006–09
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nbr:nberwo:12540&r=cba
  3. By: Troy Davig; Eric Leeper
    Abstract: This paper makes changes in monetary policy rules (or regimes) endogenous. Changes are triggered when certain endogenous variables cross specified thresholds. Rational expectations equilibria are examined in three models of threshold switching to illustrate that (i) expectations formation effects generated by the possibility of regime change can be quantitatively important; (ii) symmetric shocks can have asymmetric effects; (iii) endogenous switching is a natural way to formally model preemptive policy actions. In a conventional calibrated model, preemptive policy shifts agents’ expectations, enhancing the ability of policy to offset demand shocks; this yields a quantitatively significant “preemption dividend.”
    Keywords: Monetary policy
    Date: 2006
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fip:fedkrw:rwp06-11&r=cba
  4. By: Oliver Hülsewig; Eric Mayer; Timo Wollmershäuser
    Abstract: This paper presents a New Keynesian model that dwells on the role of banks in the cost channel of monetary policy. Banks extend loans to firms in an environment of monopolistic competition by setting the loan rate according to a Calvo-type staggered price setting approach, which means that the adjustment of the aggregate loan rate to a monetary policy shock is sticky. We estimate the model for the Euro area by adopting a minimum distance approach. Our findings exhibit that, first, frictions on the loan market influence the propagation of monetary policy shocks as the pass-through of a change in the money market rate to the loan rate is incomplete, and, second, the cost channel is operating, but the effect is weak since inflation is driven by real unit labor costs rather than the loan rate. Our main conclusion is that the strength of the cost channel is mitigated as banks shelter firms from monetary policy shocks by smoothing lending rates.
    Keywords: bank behavior, cost channel, minimum distance estimation
    JEL: E44 E52 E58
    Date: 2006
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_1813&r=cba
  5. By: Cambell Leith; Simon Wren-Lewis
    Abstract: A common feature of exchange rate misalignments is that they produce a divergence between traded and non-traded goods sectors, which appears to pose a dilemma for policy makers. In this paper we develop a small open economy model which features traded and non-traded goods sectors with which to assess the extent to which monetary policy should respond to exchange rate misalignments. To do so we initially contrast the efficient outcome of the model with that under flexible prices and find that the flex price equilibrium exhibits an excessive exchange rate appreciation in the face of a positive UIP shock. By introducing sticky prices in both sectors we provide a role for policy in the face of UIP shocks. We then derive a quadratic approximation to welfare which comprises quadratic terms in the output gaps in both sectors as well as sectoral rates of inflation. These can be rewritten in terms of the usual aggregate variables, but only after including terms in relative sectoral prices and/or the terms of trade to capture the sectoral composition of aggregates. We derive optimal policy analytically before giving numerical examples of the optimal response to UIP shocks. Finally, we contrast the optimal policy with a number of alternative policy stances and assess the robustness of results to changes in model parameters.
    Date: 2006–09
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:san:cdmacp:0605&r=cba
  6. By: Kirdan Lees (Reserve Bank of New Zealand)
    Abstract: Typical New Keynesian open economy models suggest a limited response to the exchange rate. This paper examines the role of the open economy in determining robust rules when the central bank fears various model misspecification errors. The paper calibrates a hybrid New Keynesian model to broadly fit the economies of three archetypal open economy inflation targeters - Australia, Canada, and New Zealand - and seeks robust time-consistent policy. We find that policies robust to model misspecification react more aggressively to not only the exchange rate, but also inflation, the output gap and their associated shocks. This result generalizes to the context of a flexible inflation targeting central bank that cares about the volatility of the real exchange rate. However, when the central bank places only a small weight on interest rate smoothing and fears misspecification in only exchange rate determination, a more cautious policy is recommended for all but an exchange rate shock. It is also shown that the benefits of an exchange rate channel far outweigh the concomitant costs of uncertain exchange rate determination.
    JEL: C51 E52 F41
    Date: 2006–09
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nzb:nzbdps:2006/08&r=cba
  7. By: Tesfaselassie,Mewael F.; Schaling,Eric; Eijffinger,Sylvester (Tilburg University, Center for Economic Research)
    Abstract: In this paper we incorporate the term structure of interest rates in a standard inflation forecast targeting framework. We find that under flexible inflation targeting and uncertainty in the degree of persistence in the economy, allowing for active learning possibilities has e®ects on the optimal interest rate rule followed by the central bank. For a wide range of possible initial beliefs about the unknown parameter, the dynamically optimal rule is in general more activist, in the sense of responding aggressively to the state of the economy, than the myopic rule for small to moderate deviations of the state variable from its target. On the other hand, for large deviations, the optimal policy is less activist than the myopic and the certainty equivalence policies.
    Keywords: Learning;Rational Expectations;Separation Principle;Term Structure of Interest Rates
    JEL: C53 E43 E52 F33
    Date: 2006
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:dgr:kubcen:200688&r=cba
  8. By: Sylvia Kaufmann (Oesterreichische Nationalbank, Economic Studies Division); Peter Kugler (University of Basel, WWZ, Petersgraben 51, CH-4003 Basel)
    Abstract: This paper analyzes the recently documented instability of money demand in the euro area in the framework of a Markov switching trend model. First, we consider a standard flexible price model with stable money demand, rational expectations, and an exogenous income-money ratio which follows a Markov trend. This framework, which implies an influence of expected future money on prices, leads to a cointegrating relationship between (log) prices and the (log of the) money-income ratio with a switching intercept term. Of course, this likely leads to a rejection of cointegration by standard tests and to the erroneous conclusion of an unstable money demand. Second, a more general model allowing for endogeneity and more general dynamics is estimated with Bayesian methods for euro area data from 1975-2003. This exercise provides support for our model and a stable demand for M3 in the euro area.
    Keywords: Bayesian cointegration analysis, Markov trend, Markov chain Monte Carlo, money demand.
    JEL: C11 C32 E41
    Date: 2006–09–15
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:onb:oenbwp:131&r=cba
  9. By: Stephen G. Cecchetti
    Abstract: Modern central bankers are the risk managers of the financial system. They take actions based not only on point forecasts for growth and inflation, but based on the entire distribution of possible macroeconomic outcomes. In numerous instances monetary policymakers have acted in ways designed to avert disasters. What are the implications of this approach for managin the risks posed by asset price booms? To address this question, I study data from a cross-section of countries to examine the impact of equity and property booms on the entire distribution of deviation in output and price-level from their trends. The results suggest that housing booms worsen growth prospects, creating outsized risks of very bad outcomes. By contrast, equity booms have very little impact on the expected mean and variance of macroeconomic performance, but worsen the worst outcomes.
    JEL: E5 G0
    Date: 2006–09
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nbr:nberwo:12542&r=cba
  10. By: Michael D. Bordo; Owen F. Humpage; Anna J. Schwartz
    Abstract: The deterioration in the U.S. balance of payments after 1957 and an accelerating loss of gold reserves prompted U.S. monetary authorities to undertake foreign-exchange-market interventions beginning in 1961. We discuss the events leading up to these interventions, the institutional arrangements developed for that purpose, and the controversies that ensued. Although these interventions forestalled a loss of U.S. gold reserves, in the end, they only delayed more fundamental adjustments and, in that respect, were a failure.
    Keywords: Foreign exchange administration ; Bretton Woods Agreements Act
    Date: 2006
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fip:fedcwp:0609&r=cba
  11. By: Edward Nelson
    Abstract: This paper considers the Great Inflation of the 1970s in Japan and Germany. From 1975 onward these countries had low inflation relative to other large economies. Traditionally, this success is attributed to a stronger discipline on the part of Japan and Germany*s monetary authorities*for example, more willingness to accept temporary unemployment, or stronger determination not to monetize government deficits. I instead attribute the success of these countries from the mid-1970s to their governments* and monetary authorities* acceptance that inflation is a monetary phenomenon. Symmetrically, their higher inflation in the first half of the 1970s is attributable to the fact that their policymakers over this period embraced nonmonetary theories of inflation.
    Keywords: Inflation (Finance) ; Economic conditions - Japan ; Economic conditions - Germany
    Date: 2006
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fip:fedlwp:2006-052&r=cba
  12. By: Francis E. Warnock; Veronica Cacdac Warnock
    Abstract: Foreign official purchases of U.S. government bonds have an economically large and statistically significant impact on long-term interest rates. Federal Reserve credibility, as evidenced by dramatic reductions in both long-term inflation expectations and the volatility of long rates, contributed much to the decline of long rates in the 1990s. More recently, however, foreign flows have become important. Controlling for various factors given by a standard macroeconomic model, we estimate that had there been no foreign official flows into U.S. government bonds over the past year, the 10-year Treasury yield would currently be 90 basis points higher. Our results are robust to a number of alternative specifications.
    JEL: E43 E44 F21
    Date: 2006–10
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nbr:nberwo:12560&r=cba
  13. By: William T. Gavin; Kevin L. Kliesen
    Abstract: Decision makers, both public and private, use forecasts of economic growth and inflation to make plans and implement policies. In many situations, reasonably good forecasts can be made with simple rules of thumb that are extrapolations of a single data series. In principle, information about other economic indicators should be useful in forecasting a particular series like inflation or output. Including too many variables makes a model unwieldy and not including enough can increase forecast error. A key problem is deciding which other series to include. Recently, studies have shown that Dynamic Factor Models (DFMs) may provide a general solution to this problem. The key is that these models use a large data set to extract a few common factors (thus, the term #data-rich*). This paper uses a monthly DFM model to forecast inflation and output growth at horizons of 3, 12 and 24 months ahead. These forecasts are then compared to simple forecasting rules.
    Keywords: Inflation (Finance) ; Forecasting
    Date: 2006
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fip:fedlwp:2006-054&r=cba
  14. By: Szilárd Benk; Max Gillman; Michal Kejak
    Abstract: The explanation of velocity has been based in substitution and income effects, since Keynes’s (1923) interest rate explanation and Friedman’s (1956) application of the permanent income hypothesis to money demand. Modern real business cycle theory relies on a goods productivity shocks to mimic the data’s procyclic velocity feature, as in Friedman’s explanation, while finding money shocks unimportant and not integrating financial innovation explanations. This paper sets the model within endogenous growth and adds credit shocks. It models velocity more closely, with significant roles for money shocks and credit shocks, along with the goods productivity shocks. Endogenous growth is key to the construction of the money and credit shocks since they have similar effects on velocity, through substitution effects from changes in the nominal interest rate and in the cost of financial intermediation, but opposite effects upon growth, through permanent income effects that are absent with exogenous growth.
    Keywords: Velocity, business cycle, credit shocks, endogenous growth.
    JEL: E13 E32 E44
    Date: 2006–09
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:san:cdmacp:0604&r=cba
  15. By: Jan Marc Berk; Gerbert Hebbink
    Abstract: This paper analyses the usefulness of direct measures of consumers’ perceptions and expectations of inflation for monetary policy and investigates the degree to which these variables are anchored. We inter alia seek to xplore whether there is a difference in reaction of consumers in countries with more credible central banks and those from countries with less credible central banks. We moreover investigate whether the introduction of euro coins and banknotes in 2002, that can be interpreted as a structural shock, has significantly affected the inflation rate as perceived by consumers. We find that European inflation expectations are relatively robust to sudden changes in inflation or monetary policy surprises, regardless of the credibility of the central bank. The introduction of the euro, however, significantly affected the inflation perception of European consumers.
    Keywords: Inflation expectations; Monetary policy; Survey data
    JEL: C31 C32 E58
    Date: 2006–10
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:dnb:dnbwpp:116&r=cba
  16. By: Richard G. Anderson
    Abstract: This brief essay is a working draft of an article in preparation for the forthcoming International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, 2nd ed., examining the role of the monetary base in monetary economics and monetary policymaking. Comments are welcome.
    Keywords: Money supply ; Monetary policy
    Date: 2006
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fip:fedlwp:2006-049&r=cba
  17. By: Roc Armenter; Martin Bodenstein
    Abstract: The Barro-Gordon inflation bias has provided the most influential argument for fixed exchange rate regimes. However, with low inflation rates now widespread, credibility concerns seem no longer relevant. Why give up independent monetary policy to contain an inflation bias that is already under control? We argue that credibility problems do not end with the inflation bias and they are a larger drawback for flexible exchange rates than usually thought. Absent commitment, independent monetary policy can induce expectation traps---that is, welfare ranked multiple equilibria---and perverse policy responses to real shocks, i.e., an equilibrium policy response that is welfare inferior to policy inaction. Both possibilities imply that flexible exchange rates feature unnecessary macroeconomic volatility.
    Keywords: Foreign exchange rates ; Inflation (Finance) ; Monetary policy
    Date: 2006
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fip:fedgif:865&r=cba
  18. By: Tatiana Kirsanova; Simon Wren-Lewis
    Abstract: We examine the impact of different degrees of fiscal feedback on debt in an economy with nominal rigidities where monetary policy is optimal. We look at the extent to which different degrees of fiscal feedback enhances or detracts from the ability of the monetary authorities to stabilise output and inflation. Using an objective function derived from utility, we find the optimal level of fiscal feedback to be small. There is a clear discontinuity in the behaviour of monetary policy and welfare either side of this optimal level. As the extent of fiscal feedback increases, optimal monetary policy becomes less active because fiscal feedback tends to deflate inflationary shocks. However this fiscal stabilisation is less efficient than monetary policy, and so welfare declines. In contrast, if fiscal feedback falls below some critical value, either the model becomes indeterminate, or optimal monetary policy becomes strongly passive, and this passive monetary policy leads to a sharp deterioration in welfare.
    Keywords: Fiscal Policy, Feedback Rules, Debt, Macroeconomic Stabilisation
    JEL: E52 E61 E63 F41
    Date: 2006–09
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:san:cdmacp:0609&r=cba
  19. By: David Cobham
    Abstract: This paper attempts to assess the relative activism of these three central banks, with reference to the debate on interest rate smoothing. It investigates smoothing in terms of the pattern of interest rate changes, and estimates a series of Taylor-type policy rules for each bank, using quarterly and monthly data, with ‘backward’ and ‘forward’-looking arguments, and with and without lagged dependent variables. It also examines the effect of introducing an auto-correlated error term. There is some (non-robust) evidence that the FRB is more activist, but it also seems to be more smooth; the ECB seems to adjust faster but less strongly in the long run; and the BoE’s behaviour is more difficult to identify. However, these standard policy rules are out of kilter with central banks’ own descriptions of what they do, while the long lags involved raise questions about the relevance of the Taylor principle as conventionally applied. It is therefore suggested that researchers should pay more attention to the institutional context of central banks’ behaviour, in order to produce better estimates of their policy rules which would in turn shed more light on the issues of activism and smoothing.
    Keywords: Monetary policy, activism, interest rate smoothing, central banks.
    JEL: E43 E52
    Date: 2006–09
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:san:cdmacp:0602&r=cba
  20. By: van den Hauwe, Ludwig
    Abstract: Since a few decades several sub-disciplines within economics have witnessed a reorientation towards institutional analysis. This development has in particular also affected the fields of macroeconomics and monetary theory where it has led to several proposals for far-reaching financial and monetary reform. One of the more successful of these proposals advocates a fractional-reserve free banking system, that is, a system with no central bank, but with permission for the banks to operate with a fractional reserve. This article exposes several conceptual flaws in this proposal. In particular several claims of the fractional-reserve free bankers with respect to the purported working characteristics of this system are criticized from the perspective of economic theory. In particular, the claim that a fractional-reserve free banking system would lead to the disappearance of the business cycle is recognized as false. Furthermore an invisible-hand analysis is performed, reinforcing the conclusion that fractional-reserve free banking is incompatible with the ethical and juridical principles underlying a free society.
    Keywords: monetary and banking regimes; comparative institutional analysis; central banking versus free banking controversy; fractional-reserve free banking; Law and Economics of money and banking;
    JEL: E50 E32 E42 B53 K39 G18 P34 H11
    Date: 2006–10–05
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:120&r=cba
  21. By: Basher, Syed A.; Westerlund, Joakim
    Abstract: Time series unit root evidence suggests that inflation is nonstationary. By contrast, when using more powerful panel unit root tests, Culver and Papell (1997) find that inflation is stationary. In this paper, we test the robustness of this result by applying a battery of recent panel unit root tests. The results suggest that the stationarity of inflation holds even after controlling for crosssectional dependence and structural change.
    Keywords: Unit Root; Inflation; Cross-Sectional Dependence; Structural Change.
    JEL: C32 E31 C33
    Date: 2006
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:136&r=cba
  22. By: Martin Schneider (Oesterreichische Nationalbank, Economic Studies Division); Markus Leibrecht (WU Wien)
    Abstract: This paper gives an overview of the current version of the quarterly macroeconomic model of the Oesterreichische Nationalbank for Austria. The model is a small to medium size macroeconomic model. It is in the tradition of the neoclassical synthesis and is therefore in line with most models used by euro system central banks. The model has been extended in several ways compared with the previous version. The most important changes concern the use of oil and import competitor’s prices in the supply block, a more detailed treatment of government receipts, the use of tax rates as policy instruments as well as a dynamic import demand indicator. In the empirical part, the paper presents some simulation results to show the impact of tax increases on the Austrian economy and the reaction of the model to five standard macroeconomic shocks: Increases of the value added tax, the personal income tax and the corporate income tax by the same amount have different effects on the Austrian economy. The reaction of the model to macroeconomic shocks is characterized by a high demand multiplier and a low negative impact of price competitiveness on exports.
    Keywords: Macroeconometric Model, AUstria
    JEL: C3 C5 E1 E2
    Date: 2006–09–18
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:onb:oenbwp:132&r=cba
  23. By: Bowen, H.P.; Munandar, H.; Viaene, J.M.
    Abstract: We show that in a fully integrated economy, in which there is free mobility of goods and factors, each member’s share of total output will equal its shares of total stocks of productive factors (i.e., physical and human capital). We label this result the equal-share relationship. This relationship also holds in the presence of technological differences or costs of factor mobility among members if outputs or inputs are properly measured to reflect such differences or costs. The equal-share relationship is the limiting distribution of output and factors among members of a fully integrated economy, and it constraints the set of policies that can affect each member’s relative growth within an integrated economy. We empirically examine for the equal-share relationship for alternative economic groups (i.e., US states, EU countries, Developing Countries and a World comprising 55 countries). Our findings indicate that the equal-share relationship holds strongly for US states, holds weakly for EU countries, but does not hold for Developing Countries or the World.
    Keywords: Distribution of production, economic growth, economic convergence, factor mobility, integrated economy
    JEL: E13 F15 F21 F22 O57
    Date: 2006–10–04
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:vlg:vlgwps:2006-32&r=cba
  24. By: Yunus Aksoy (School of Economics, Mathematics & Statistics, Birkbeck); Hanno Lustig
    Abstract: We suggest a new dynamic partial equilibrium approach that features product differentiation and endogenizes market structure at the same time. The model yields clear-cut predictions regarding the effects of small and large exchange rate shocks on the market structure, pass-through and international trade. First, we account for the asymmetric price adjustment process with respect to exchange rate shocks. Secondly, we discuss an array of conditions where short and long-run international monetary neutrality is violated. We present in detail under which conditions imperfect competition is able to generate persistent and volatile real exchange rate deviations. Most predictions survive alternative market configurations.
    JEL: L16
    Date: 2006–10
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bbk:bbkefp:0609&r=cba
  25. By: Guglielmo Maria Caporale; Christoph Hanck
    Abstract: We analyse whether tests of PPP exhibit erratic behaviour (as previously reported by Caporale et al., 2003) even when (possibly unwarranted) homogeneity and proportionality restrictions are not imposed, and trivariate cointegration (stage-three) tests between the nominal exchange rate, domestic and foreign price levels are carried out (instead of stationarity tests on the real exchange rate, as in stage-two tests). We examine the US dollar real exchange rate vis-à-vis 21 other currencies over a period of more than a century, and find that stage-three tests produce similar results to those for stage-two tests, namely the former also behave erratically. This confirms that neither of these traditional approaches to testing for PPP can solve the issue of PPP.
    Keywords: Purchasing Power Parity (PPP), real exchange rate, cointegration, stationarity, parameter instability
    JEL: C12 C22 F31
    Date: 2006
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_1811&r=cba
  26. By: Novy, Dennis (Department of Economics, University of Warwick)
    Abstract: The choice of invoicing currency for trade is crucial for the international transmission of macroeconomic policy. This paper develops a three-country model that endogenizes the choice of invoicing currency and that allows for a share of firms' costs to be denominated in foreign currency, consistent with the empirical evidence on the high degree of pass-through to import prices. Invoicing decisions are driven by firms' desire to hedge costs but also by exchange rate volatility and currency comovements. The model is tested empirically with a data set that spans ten currencies and 24 reporting countries, confirming the importance of currency comovements for the decision to invoice in vehicle currency. The findings also imply that if the U.S. share of world output continues to fall, other currencies will increasingly replace the U.S. dollar as an international vehicle currency.
    Keywords: Invoicing Currency ; Exchange Rate Risk ; Hedging
    JEL: F3 F4
    Date: 2006
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:wrk:warwec:765&r=cba
  27. By: Thomas A. Lubik; Paolo Surico
    Abstract: This paper re-considers the empirical relevance of the Lucas critique using a DSGE sticky price model in which a weak central bank response to inflation generates equilibrium indeterminacy. The model is calibrated on the magnitude of the historical shift in the Federal Reserve’s policy rule and is capable of generating the decline in the volatility of inflation and real activity observed in U.S. data. Using Monte Carlo simulations and a backward-looking model of aggregate supply and demand, we show that shifts in the policy rule induce breaks in both the reduced-form coefficients and the reduced-form error variances. The statistics of popular parameter stability tests are shown to have low power if such heteroskedasticity is neglected. In contrast, when the instability of the reduced-form error variances is accounted for, the Lucas critique is found to be empirically relevant for both artificial and actual data.
    Keywords: Monetary policy ; Econometric models
    Date: 2006
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fip:fedrwp:06-05&r=cba
  28. By: Stephen Quinn; William Roberds
    Abstract: The Bank of Amsterdam, founded in 1609, was the first public bank to offer accounts not directly convertible to coin. As such, it can be described as the first true central bank. The debut of central bank money did not result from any conscious policy decision, however, but instead arose almost by accident, in response to the chaotic monetary conditions during the early years of the Dutch Republic. This paper examines the history of this momentous development from the perspective of modern monetary theory.
    Date: 2006
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fip:fedawp:2006-13&r=cba
  29. By: Morten L. Bech; Bart Hobijn
    Abstract: We examine the diffusion of real-time gross settlement (RTGS) technology across all 174 central banks. RTGS reduces settlement risk and facilitates financial innovation in the settlement of foreign exchange trades. In 1985, only three central banks had implemented RTGS systems, and by year-end 2005, that number had increased to ninety. We find that the RTGS diffusion process is consistent with the standard S-curve prediction. Real GDP per capita, the relative price of capital, and trade patterns explain a significant part of the cross-country variation in RTGS adoption. These determinants are remarkably similar to those that seem to drive the cross-country adoption patterns of other technologies.
    Keywords: Banks and banking, Central ; Foreign exchange ; Technological innovations
    Date: 2006
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fip:fednsr:260&r=cba
  30. By: Matesanz Gómez, David; Ortega, Guillermo J.
    Abstract: We propose a country classification of economic growth currency crisis consequences based on the entropic analysis of the real exchange rate. We show that this ranking is highly correlated with the annual minimum rate of growth, a proxy used to quantify real currency crisis effects.
    Keywords: currency crises; entropy; growth effects of currency crises
    JEL: C82 F40 F31
    Date: 2005
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:211&r=cba
  31. By: Jianhuai Shi
    Abstract: The Chinese economy has been in a state of external and internal imbalances for some years, which has something to do with the undervaluation of renminbi (RMB). But the Chinese Government hesitates to allow RMB to appreciate because of the worry that RMB appreciations are contractionary thus have negative impact on China's economic growth and employment. The purpose of this paper is to empirically assess the effects of RMB real exchange rate on China's output. The econometric results of the paper show that (1) even after source of spurious correlation is controlled for, RMB appreciation has led to a decline in China’s output, suggesting that RMB appreciations are contractionary, and that (2) once the international finance linkage of Chinese economy is accounted for, the effect of RMB real exchange rate shocks on China’s output and the power of the shocks in explaining the change of China’s output are diminished. The paper gives some possible explanations to those findings, and points out that the findings do not necessarily imply that China should continue maintaining the undervaluation of RMB.
    JEL: F31 F41 O53
    Date: 2006–10
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nbr:nberwo:12551&r=cba
  32. By: Patrick J. Kehoe
    Abstract: The common approach to evaluating a model in the structural VAR literature is to compare the impulse responses from structural VARs run on the data to the theoretical impulse responses from the model. The Sims-Cogley-Nason approach instead compares the structural VARs run on the data to identical structural VARs run on data from the model of the same length as the actual data. Chari, Kehoe, and McGrattan (2006) argue that the inappropriate comparison made by the common approach is the root of the problems in the SVAR literature. In practice, the problems can be solved simply. Switching from the common approach to the Sims-Cogley-Nason ap-proach basically involves changing a few lines of computer code and a few lines of text. This switch will vastly increase the value of the structural VAR literature for economic theory.
    Date: 2006
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fip:fedmsr:379&r=cba
  33. By: Matesanz Gómez, David; Fugarolas Álvarez-Ude, Guadalupe
    Abstract: Using multivariate cointegration tests for non-stationary data and vector error correction models, this paper examines the determinants of trade balance for Argentina over the last forty to fifty years. Our investigation confirms the existence of long-run relationships among trade balance, Real Exchange Rate (RER) and foreign and domestic incomes for Argentina during different real exchange rate management policies. Based on the estimations, the Marshall-Lerner condition is examined and, by means of impulse response functions, we trace the effect of a one-time shock to the RER on the trade balance checking the J-curve pattern.
    Keywords: Argentina; Marshall-Lerner; J-Curve; cointegration and impulse response analysis
    JEL: C22 F43 C32 F31
    Date: 2006
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:151&r=cba
  34. By: Alan M. Taylor; Janine L. F. Wilson
    Abstract: Do international trade and finance flow together? In theory, trade and finance can be substitutes or complements, so the matter must be resolved empirically. We study trade and financial flows from the United Kingdom from 1870 to 1913 and the United States in the interwar years. Trade and finance are robustly correlated, even after allowing for simultaneity. Evidence from the British Empire casts doubt on the idea that trade is a punishment device in the event of a default.
    JEL: F10 F30 F40 N10 N20 N70
    Date: 2006–09
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nbr:nberwo:12543&r=cba
  35. By: Alexandra Lai; Nikil Chande; Sean O'Connor
    Abstract: Payments systems are typically characterized by some degree of tiering, with upstream firms (clearing agents) providing settlement accounts to downstream institutions that wish to clear and settle payments indirectly in these systems (indirect clearers). Clearing agents provide their indirect clearers with an essential input (clearing and settlement services), while also competing directly with them in the retail market for payment services. The authors construct a model of a clearing agent with an indirect clearer to examine the clearing agent's incentives to lever off its upstream position to gain a competitive advantage in the retail payment services market. The model demonstrates that a clearing agent can attain this competitive advantage by raising the indirect clearer's costs, but that the incentive to raise these costs is mitigated by credit risk to the clearing agent from the provision of uncollateralized overdrafts to its indirect clearer. The results suggest that tiered payments systems, which require clearing agents to provide overdraft facilities to their indirect clearers, may result in a more competitive retail payment services market.
    Keywords: Financial institutions; Financial services; Market structure and pricing; Payment, clearing, and settlement systems
    JEL: G21 L12 L13 L22
    Date: 2006
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bca:bocawp:06-36&r=cba
  36. By: José Alberto Fuinhas (Departamento de Gestão e Economia, Universidade da Beira Interior)
    Abstract: This paper investigates the role of bank lending in the monetary transmission process in Portugal. We estimate a small sectoral VAR model of the Portuguese macroeconomy. This model is then used to simulate the effects of an exogenous monetary policy shock upon asset prices, bank balance sheet variables and final target variables (activity and prices), for the personal and corporate sectors. Significant sectoral differences are found among the channels of monetary transmission. In addition, the use of sectoral data facilitates the identification of distinct money and credit channels in the transmission of monetary policy. These results contrast with the ambiguous findings on the roles of money and credit in the literature to date. Our study suggests that there is a bank-lending channel in Portugal.
    Keywords: Credit channel; bank lending; and monetary transmission
    JEL: C32 E44 E51 E52
    Date: 2006
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:csh:wpecon:e01/2006&r=cba
  37. By: Saki Bigio (New York University and Central Bank of Peru); Jorge Salas (Central Bank of Peru)
    Abstract: We study whether monetary policy and real exchange rate shocks have non-linear effects on output and inflation in a partially dollarized economy such as Peru. For this purpose, we use a Smooth Transition Vector Autoregression methodology and then report impulse-response functions for shocks of different sign and size, and conditional to the initial position in the business cycle. We find evidence of non-linearities which imply a convex aggregate supply curve: in particular, monetary policy is more likely to affect the output during recessions than in booms, while the opposite is found for the inflation. Regarding real exchange rate shocks, we show that depreciations have greater negative effects during economic downturns and a higher pass-through rate in the positive side of the business cycle.
    Keywords: Non-linearities, Monetary Policy, Smooth Transition VAR, Dollarization
    JEL: E32 E52 E58 C32
    Date: 2006–08
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:rbp:wpaper:2006-008&r=cba

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