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Andrew K. Rose's
Scholarly Papers
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Total Downloads
4,257 |
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Citations
2,457 |
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1.
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Barry J. Eichengreen University of California, Berkeley - Department of Economics Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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06 Oct 98
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27 Nov 00
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592 (11,181)
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51
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Abstract:
We analyze banking crises using a panel of macroeconomic and financial data for more than 100 developing countries from 1975 through 1992. We find that banking crises in emerging markets are strongly associated with adverse external conditions. In particular, high Northern interest rates are strongly associated with the onset of banking crises in developing countries, even after taking into account a host of internal macroeconomic factors.
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2.
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Jeffrey A. Frankel Harvard University - John F. Kennedy School of Government Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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14 Apr 01
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30 Nov 03
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295 (27,902)
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126
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Abstract:
Gravity-based cross-sectional evidence indicates that currency unions and currency boards stimulate trade; cross-sectional evidence indicates that trade stimulates income. This paper estimates the effect that common-currency regimes have, via trade, on income per capita. We use economic and geographic data for over 200 countries to quantify the implications of common currencies for trade and income, pursuing a two-stage approach. Our estimates at the first stage suggest that belonging to a currency union more than triples trade with the other members of the zone. Moreover, there is no evidence of trade-diversion. Thus currency unions raise overall trade. Currency boards have similar effects. Our estimates at the second stage suggest that every one percent increase in trade (relative to GDP) raises income per capita by at least one third of a percent over twenty years. We combine the two estimates to quantify the effect of common currencies on output. Our results support the hypothesis that the beneficial effects of such regimes on economic performance come through the promotion of trade, rather than through a commitment to non-inflationary monetary policy, or other macroeconomic influences.
Economics-International Economics, International Trade and Finance
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3.
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Offshore Financial Centers: Parasites or Symbionts?
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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Posted:
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19 May 05
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02 Jul 09
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294 ( 28,022) |
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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04 May 06
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02 Jul 09
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This paper analyzes the causes and consequences of offshore financial centers (OFCs). Since OFCs are likely to be tax havens and money launderers, they encourage bad behavior in source countries. Nevertheless, OFCs may also have unintended positive consequences for their neighbors, since they act as a competitive fringe for the domestic banking sector. We derive and simulate a model of a home country monopoly bank facing a representative competitive OFC which offers tax advantages attained by moving assets offshore at a cost that is increasing in distance between the OFC and the source. Our model predicts that proximity to an OFC is likely to have pro-competitive implications for the domestic banking sector, although the overall effect on welfare is ambiguous. We test and confirm the predictions empirically. OFC proximity is associated with a more competitive domestic banking system and greater overall financial depth.
Institutional subscribers to the NBER working paper series, and residents of developing countries may download this paper without additional charge at www.nber.org.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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06 Oct 05
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11 Oct 05
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Abstract:
This paper analyzes the causes and consequences of offshore financial centers (OFCs). Since OFCs are likely to be tax havens and money launderers, they encourage bad behavior in source countries. Nevertheless, OFCs may also have unintended positive consequences for their neighbors, since they act as a competitive fringe for the domestic banking sector. We derive and simulate a model of a home country monopoly bank facing a representative competitive OFC which offers tax advantages attained by moving assets offshore at a cost that is increasing in distance between the OFC and the source. Our model predicts that proximity to an OFC is likely to have pro-competitive implications for the domestic banking sector, although the overall effect on welfare is ambiguous. We test and confirm the predictions empirically. Proximity to an OFC is associated with a more competitive domestic banking system and greater overall financial depth.
Theory, empirical, data, cross-section, asset, tax, haven, money, competitive
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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19 May 05
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04 Aug 05
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258
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Abstract:
This paper analyzes the causes and consequences of offshore financial centers (OFCs). Since OFCs are likely to be tax havens and money launderers, they encourage bad behavior in source countries. Nevertheless, OFCs may also have unintended positive consequences for their neighbors, since they act as a competitive fringe for the domestic banking sector. We derive and simulate a model of a home country monopoly bank facing a representative competitive OFC which offers tax advantages attained by moving assets offshore at a cost that is increasing in distance between the OFC and the source. Our model predicts that proximity to an OFC is likely to have pro-competitive implications for the domestic banking sector, although the overall effect on welfare is ambiguous. We test and confirm the predictions empirically. Proximity to an OFC is associated with a more competitive domestic banking system and greater overall financial depth.
Theory, empirical, data, cross-section, asset, tax, haven, money, competitive
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4.
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Is Trade Good or Bad for the Environment? Sorting Out the Causality
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Jeffrey A. Frankel Harvard University - John F. Kennedy School of Government Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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Posted:
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20 Sep 02
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21 Oct 03
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293 ( 28,138) |
28
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Jeffrey A. Frankel Harvard University - John F. Kennedy School of Government Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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08 Oct 03
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21 Oct 03
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253
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Abstract:
We seek to contribute to the debate over globalization and the environment by asking: What is the effect of trade on a country's environment, for a given level of GDP? We take specific account of the endogeneity of trade, using exogenous geographic determinants of trade as instrumental variables. We find that trade tends to reduce three measures of air pollution. Statistical significance is high for concentrations of SO2, moderate for NO2, and lacking for particulate matter. While results for other environmental measures are not as encouraging, there is little evidence that trade has a detrimental effect on the environment.
Openness, Growth, pollution, Kuznets, instrumental, variable, causality, simultaneity
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Jeffrey A. Frankel Harvard University - John F. Kennedy School of Government Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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20 Sep 02
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07 Oct 03
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What is the effect of trade on a country's environment, for a given level of GDP? Some have observed an apparent positive correlation between openness to trade and measures of environmental quality. But this could be due to endogeneity of trade, rather than causality. This paper uses exogenous determinants of trade - geographical variables from the gravity model - as instruments to isolate the effect of openness. The finding is that trade may indeed have a beneficial effect on three measures of air pollution. Statistical significance is lacking for Particulate Matter, but is moderate for NO2, and high for SO2. Results for broader environmental measures are not as encouraging, but one can at least say that there is little evidence that trade has the detrimental effect on the environment that the race-to-the-bottom theory would lead one to expect. The larger effect appears to come via income itself: our results generally support the environmental Kuznets curve, which says that growth harms the environment at low levels of income and helps at high levels, and to support the proposition that openness to trade accelerates the growth process.
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5.
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Do We Really Know that the WTO Increases Trade?
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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Posted:
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11 Oct 02
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Last Revised:
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27 Aug 07
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218 ( 38,980) |
116
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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27 Aug 07
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27 Aug 07
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This paper estimates the effect on international trade of multilateral trade agreements: the World Trade Organization (WTO), its predecessor the Generalized Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), and the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) extended from rich countries to developing countries. I use a standard gravity model of bilateral merchandise trade and a large panel data set covering over 50 years and 175 countries. An extensive search reveals little evidence that countries joining or belonging to the GATT/WTO have different trade patterns than outsiders. The GSP does seem to have a strong effect, and is associated with an approximate doubling of trade.
empirical, bilateral, panel, gravity, GATT, GSP, international, multilateral, panel
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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11 Oct 02
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11 Oct 02
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94
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Abstract:
This paper estimates the effect on international trade of multilateral trade agreements: the World Trade Organization (WTO), its predecessor the Generalized Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), and the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) extended from rich countries to developing countries. I use a standard 'gravity' model of bilateral merchandise trade and a large panel data set covering over fifty years and 175 countries. An extensive search reveals little evidence that countries joining or belonging to the GATT/WTO have different trade patterns than outsiders. The GSP does seem to have a strong effect, and is associated with an approximate doubling of trade.
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6.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Olivier Jeanne International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department
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03 Mar 03
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03 Mar 03
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144 (58,579)
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Both the literature and new empirical evidence show that exchange rate regimes differ primarily by the noisiness of the exchange rate, not by measurable macroeconomic fundamentals. This motivates a theoretical analysis of exchange rate regimes with noise traders. The presence of noise traders can lead to multiple equilibria in the foreign exchange market. The entry of noise traders alters the composition of the market and generates excess exchange rate volatility, since noise traders both create and share the risk associated with exchange rate volatility. In such circumstances, monetary policy can be used to lower exchange rate volatility without altering macroeconomic fundamentals.
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Jeffrey A. Frankel Harvard University - John F. Kennedy School of Government Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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08 Jul 00
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08 Jul 00
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135 (61,967)
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121
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Abstract:
We survey the empirical literature on floating nominal exchange rates over the past decade. Exchange rates are difficult to forecast at short- to medium-term horizons. There is a bit of explanatory power to monetary models such as the Dornbusch 'overshooting' theory, in the form of reaction to 'news' and in forecasts at long-run horizons. Nevertheless, at short horizons, a driftless random walk characterizes exchange rates better than standard models based on observable macroeconomic fundamentals. Unexplained large shocks to floating rates must then, logically, be due either to innovations in unobservable fundamentals, or to non-fundamental factors such as speculative bubbles. The observed difference in exchange rate and macroeconomic volatility under different nominal exchange rate regimes makes us skeptical of the first view. The theory and evidence on speculative bubbles, however, is not conclusive. We conclude with the hope that promising new studies of the microstructure of the foreign exchange market might eventually rise to insights into these phenomena.
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8.
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A Gravity Model of Sovereign Lending: Trade, Default and Credit
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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Posted:
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19 Oct 02
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Last Revised:
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10 May 05
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127 ( 65,281) |
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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10 May 05
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10 May 05
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90
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One reason why countries service their external debts is the fear that default might lead to shrinkage of international trade. If so, then creditors should systematically lend more to countries with which they share closer trade links. We develop a simple theoretical model to capture this intuition, then test and corroborate this idea.
Theory, empirical, panel, bilateral, bank, loan
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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19 Oct 02
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24 Oct 02
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Abstract:
One reason why countries service their external debts is the fear that default might lead to shrinkage of international trade. If so, then creditors should systematically lend more to countries with which they share closer trade links. We develop a simple theoretical model to capture this intuition, then test and corroborate this idea.
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9.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Robert P. Flood International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department
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16 Jun 03
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04 Aug 09
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115 (70,798)
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This paper develops a simple new methodology to test financial market integration. Our technique is tightly based on a general intertemporal asset-pricing model, and relies on estimating and comparing expected discount rates across asset markets. The technique is undemanding in terms of both data and estimation. We provide a variety of domestic and international empirical illustrations of our technique, and find surprisingly little evidence of integration. While the S&P 500 market seems typically to be integrated, others are not, including: the NASDAQ, the Toronto Stock Exchange, and three different classes of American bonds. Further, there is little evidence of integration between these apparently deep frictionless financial markets.
discount, rate, intertemporal, financial, market, expected, price, stock, bond
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10.
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Robert P. Flood International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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14 Feb 06
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14 Feb 06
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114 (71,279)
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This paper tests for uncovered interest parity (UIP) using daily data for 23 developing and developed countries through the crisis-strewn 1990s. We find that UIP works better on average in the 1990s than in previous eras in the sense that the slope coefficient from a regression of exchange rate changes on interest differentials yields a positive coefficient (which is sometimes insignificantly different from unity). UIP works systematically worse for fixed and flexible exchange rate countries than for crisis countries, but we find no significant differences between rich and poor countries.
empirical, exchange rate, fixed, floating, developing, developed
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11.
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Quantitative Goals for Monetary Policy
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Antonio Fatás INSEAD Ilian Mihov INSEAD - Economics and Political Sciences Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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Posted:
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20 Jul 04
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22 May 06
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109 ( 73,873) |
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Antonio Fatás INSEAD Ilian Mihov INSEAD - Economics and Political Sciences Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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22 May 06
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22 May 06
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73
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Abstract:
We study empirically the macroeconomic effects of an explicit de jure quantitative goal for monetary policy. Quantitative goals take three forms: exchange rates, money growth rates, and inflation targets. We analyze the effects on inflation of both having a quantitative target, and of hitting a declared target; we also consider effects on output volatility. Our empirical work uses an annual data set covering 42 countries between 1960 and 2000, and takes account of other determinants of inflation (such as fiscal policy, the business cycle, and openness to international trade), and the endogeneity of the monetary policy regime. We find that both having and hitting quantitative targets for monetary policy is systematically and robustly associated with lower inflation. The exact form of the monetary target matters somewhat (especially for the sustainability of the monetary regime), but is less important than having some quantitative target. Successfully achieving a quantitative monetary goal is also associated with less volatile output.
Transparency, exchange, rate, money, growth, inflation, target, business cycle
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Antonio Fatás INSEAD Ilian Mihov INSEAD - Economics and Political Sciences Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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02 Nov 04
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11 Nov 04
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Abstract:
We study empirically the macroeconomic effects of an explicit de jure quantitative goal for monetary policy. Quantitative goals take three forms: exchange rates, money growth rates, and inflation targets. We analyze the effects on inflation of both having a quantitative target, and of hitting a declared target; we also consider effects on output volatility. Our empirical work uses an annual data set covering 42 countries between 1960 and 2000, and takes account of other determinants of inflation (such as fiscal policy, the business cycle, and openness to international trade), and the endogeneity of the monetary policy regime. We find that both having and hitting quantitative targets for monetary policy is systematically and robustly associated with lower inflation. The exact form of the monetary target matters somewhat, but is less important than having some quantitative target. Successfully achieving a quantitative monetary goal is also associated with less volatile output.
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Antonio Fatás INSEAD Ilian Mihov INSEAD - Economics and Political Sciences Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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20 Jul 04
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02 Nov 04
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Abstract:
We study empirically the macroeconomic effects of an explicit de jure quantitative goal for monetary policy. Quantitative goals take three forms: exchange rates, money growth rates, and inflation targets. We analyse the effects on inflation of both having a quantitative target, and of hitting a declared target; we also consider effects on output volatility. Our empirical work uses an annual dataset covering 42 countries between 1960 and 2000, and takes account of other determinants of inflation (such as fiscal policy, the business cycle, and openness to international trade), and the endogeneity of the monetary policy regime. We find that both having and hitting quantitative targets for monetary policy is systematically and robustly associated with lower inflation. The exact form of the monetary target matters somewhat, but is less important than having some quantitative target. Successfully achieving a quantitative monetary goal is also associated with less volatile output.
Transparency, exchange, rate, money, growth, inflation, target, business cycle
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12.
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Contagious Currency Crises
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Barry J. Eichengreen University of California, Berkeley - Department of Economics Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Charles Wyplosz University of Geneva - Graduate Institute of International Studies (HEI)
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03 Oct 96
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18 Nov 01
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98 ( 79,911) |
170
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Barry J. Eichengreen University of California, Berkeley - Department of Economics Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Charles Wyplosz University of Geneva - Graduate Institute of International Studies (HEI)
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18 Nov 01
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18 Nov 01
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This paper is concerned with the fact that the incidence of speculative attacks tend to be temporally correlated; that is, currency crises appear to pass 'contagiously' from one country to another. The paper provides a survey of the theoretical literature, and analyses the contagious nature of currency crises empirically. Using 30 years of panel data from 20 industrialized countries, we find evidence of contagion. Contagion appears to spread more easily to countries that are closely tied by international trade linkages than to countries in similar macroeconomic circumstances.
Channels, data, international, macroeconomic, panel, similarity, speculative, trade
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Barry J. Eichengreen University of California, Berkeley - Department of Economics Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Charles Wyplosz University of Geneva - Graduate Institute of International Studies (HEI)
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03 Oct 96
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10 May 00
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Abstract:
This paper is concerned with the fact that the incidence of speculative attacks tends to be temporally correlated; that is, currency crises appear to pass contagiously from one country to another. The paper provides a survey of the theoretical literature, and analyzes the contagious nature of currency crises empirically. Using thirty years of panel data from twenty industrialized countries, we find evidence of contagion. Contagion appears to spread more easily to countries which are closely tied by international trade linkages than to countries in similar macroeconomic circumstances.
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13.
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The Foreign Service and Foreign Trade: Embassies as Export Promotion
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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Posted:
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08 Mar 05
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12 Feb 07
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82 ( 90,351) |
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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20 Jan 07
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12 Feb 07
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As communication costs fall, foreign embassies and consulates have lost much of their role in decision-making and information-gathering. Accordingly, foreign services are increasingly marketing themselves as agents of export promotion. I investigate whether exports are in fact systematically associated with diplomatic representation abroad. I use a recent cross-section of data covering 22 large exporters and 200 import destinations. Bilateral exports rise by approximately six to ten per cent for each additional consulate abroad, controlling for a host of other features including reverse causality. The effect varies by exporter, and is non-linear; consulates have smaller effects than the creation of an embassy.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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27 Jul 05
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02 Aug 05
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Abstract:
As communication costs fall, foreign embassies and consulates have lost much of their role in decision-making and information-gathering. Accordingly, foreign services are increasingly marketing themselves as agents of export promotion. I investigate whether exports are in fact systematically associated with diplomatic representation abroad. I use a recent cross-section of data covering 22 large exporters and 200 import destinations. Bilateral exports rise by approximately 6-10% for each additional consulate abroad, controlling for a host of other features including reverse causality. The effect varies by exporter, and is non-linear; consulates have smaller effects than the creation of an embassy.
International, import, destination, country, empirical, data, panel, consulate, gravity
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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08 Mar 05
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27 Jul 05
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Abstract:
As communication costs fall, foreign embassies and consulates have lost much of their role in decision-making and information-gathering. Accordingly, foreign services are increasingly marketing themselves as agents of export promotion. I investigate whether exports are in fact systematically associated with diplomatic representation abroad. I use a recent cross-section of data covering twenty-two large exporters and two-hundred import destinations. Bilateral exports rise by approximately 6-10% for each additional consulate abroad, controlling for a host of other features including reverse causality. The effect varies by exporter, and is non-linear; consulates have smaller effects than the creation of an embassy.
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14.
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One Reason Countries Pay Their Debts: Renegotiation and International Trade
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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Posted:
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08 Feb 02
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Last Revised:
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24 Aug 07
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76 ( 94,820) |
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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01 Aug 06
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24 Aug 07
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Abstract:
This paper estimates the effect of sovereign debt renegotiation on international trade. Sovereign default may be associated with a subsequent decline in international trade either because creditors want to deter default by debtors, or because trade finance dries up after default. To estimate the effect, I use an empirical gravity model of bilateral trade and a large panel data set covering fifty years and more than 200 trading partners. The model controls for a host of factors that influence bilateral trade flows, including the incidence of International Monetary Fund programs. Using the dates of sovereign debt renegotiations conducted through the Paris Club as a proxy measure for sovereign default, I find that renegotiation is associated with an economically and statistically significant decline in bilateral trade between a debtor and its creditors. The decline in bilateral trade is approximately 8 percent a year and persists for about fifteen years.
empirical, sovereign, default, bilateral, gravity, rescheduling
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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23 Mar 02
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23 Mar 02
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Abstract:
This paper estimates the effect of sovereign debt renegotiation on international trade. Sovereign default may be associated with a subsequent decline in international trade either because creditors want to deter default by debtors, or because trade finance dries up after default. To estimate the effect, I use an empirical gravity model of bilateral trade and a large panel data set covering fifty years and over 200 trading partners. The model controls for a host of factors that influence bilateral trade flows, including the incidence of IMF programs. Using the dates of sovereign debt renegotiations conducted through the Paris Club as a proxy measure for sovereign default, I find that renegotiation is associated with an economically and statistically significant decline in bilateral trade between a debtor and its creditors. The decline in bilateral trade is approximately eight percent a year and persists for around fifteen years.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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08 Feb 02
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Last Revised:
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23 Mar 02
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17
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65
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Abstract:
This Paper estimates the effect of sovereign debt renegotiation on international trade. Sovereign default may be associated with a subsequent decline in international trade either because creditors want to deter default by debtors, or because trade finance dries up after default. To estimate the effect, I use an empirical gravity model of bilateral trade and a large panel data set covering fifty years and over 200 trading partners. The model controls for a host of factors that influence bilateral trade flows, including the incidence of IMF programs. Using the dates of sovereign debt renegotiations conducted through the Paris Club as a proxy measure for sovereign default, I find that renegotiation is associated with an economically and statistically significant decline in bilateral trade between a debtor and its creditors. The decline in bilateral trade is approximately eight percent a year and persists for around fifteen years.
Empirical, sovereign, default, bilateral, panel, gravity, Paris, club, rescheduling
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15.
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An Empirical Exploration of Exchange Rate Target-Zones
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Robert P. Flood International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Donald J. Mathieson International Monetary Fund (IMF)
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Posted:
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15 Feb 06
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Last Revised:
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25 May 06
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71 ( 98,885) |
8
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Robert P. Flood International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Donald J. Mathieson International Monetary Fund (IMF)
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| Posted: |
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15 Feb 06
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Last Revised:
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15 Feb 06
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46
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8
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Abstract:
In the context of a flexible-price monetary exchange rate model and the assumption of uncovered interest parity, we obtain a measure of the fundamental determinant of exchange rates. Daily data for the European Monetary System are used to explore the importance of nonlinearities in the relationship between the exchange rates and fundamentals. Many implications of existing "target-zone" exchange rate models are tested; little support is found for existing nonlinear models of limited exchange rate flexibility.
EMS, exchange rates, nonlinear, target-zone
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Robert P. Flood International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Donald J. Mathieson International Monetary Fund (IMF)
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| Posted: |
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25 May 06
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Last Revised:
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25 May 06
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25
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8
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Abstract:
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16.
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Estimating the Effect of Currency Unions on Trade and Output
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Versions (2)
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Jeffrey A. Frankel Harvard University - John F. Kennedy School of Government Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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Posted:
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25 Aug 00
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Last Revised:
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13 Sep 01
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69 (100,602) |
34
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Jeffrey A. Frankel Harvard University - John F. Kennedy School of Government Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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22 May 01
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Last Revised:
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13 Sep 01
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20
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34
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Abstract:
Gravity-based cross-sectional evidence indicates that currency unions stimulate trade; cross-sectional evidence indicates that trade stimulates output. This paper estimates the effect that currency union has, via trade, on output per capita. We use economic and geographic data for over 200 countries to quantify the implications of currency unions for trade and output, pursuing a two-stage approach. Our estimates at the first stage suggest that belonging to a currency union more than triples trade with the other members of the zone. Moreover, there is no evidence of trade-diversion. Our estimates at the second stage suggest that every one percent increase in trade (relative to GDP) raises income per capita by roughly 1/3 of a percent over twenty years. We combine the two estimates to quantify the effect of currency union on output. Our results support the hypothesis that the beneficial effects of currency unions on economic performance come through the promotion of trade, rather than through a commitment to non-inflationary monetary policy, or other macroeconomic influences.
Common, cross-section, dollarization, empirical, growth, income, monetary
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Jeffrey A. Frankel Harvard University - John F. Kennedy School of Government Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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25 Aug 00
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Last Revised:
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25 Jun 01
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49
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34
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Abstract:
Gravity-based cross-sectional evidence indicates that currency unions stimulate trade; cross-sectional evidence indicates that trade stimulates output. This paper estimates the effect that currency union has, via trade, on output per capita. We use economic and geographic data for over 200 countries to quantify the implications of currency unions for trade and output, pursuing a two-state approach. Our estimates at the first stage suggest that belonging to a currency union more than triples trade with the other members of the zone. Moreover, there is no evidence of trade-diversion. Our estimates at the second stage suggest that every one percent increase in trade (relative to GDP) raises income per capita by roughly 1/3 of a percent over twenty years. We combine the two estimates to quantify the effect of currency union on output. Our results support the hypothesis that the beneficial effects of currency unions on economic performance come through the promotion of trade, rather than through a commitment to non-inflationary monetary policy, or other macroeconomic influences.
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17.
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Cross-Country Causes and Consequences of the 2008 Crisis: Early Warning
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hide multiple versions |
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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Posted:
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26 Aug 09
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Last Revised:
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16 Oct 09
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66 (103,249) |
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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| Posted: |
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21 Sep 09
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Last Revised:
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16 Oct 09
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16
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Abstract:
This paper models the causes of the 2008 financial crisis together with its manifestations, using a Multiple Indicator Multiple Cause (MIMIC) model. Our analysis is conducted on a cross-section of 107 countries; we focus on national causes and consequences of the crisis, ignoring cross-country "contagion" effects. Our model of the incidence of the crisis combines 2008 changes in real GDP, the stock market, country credit ratings, and the exchange rate. We explore the linkages between these manifestations of the crisis and a number of its possible causes from 2006 and earlier. We include over sixty potential causes of the crisis, covering such categories as: financial system policies and conditions; asset price appreciation in real estate and equity markets; international imbalances and foreign reserve adequacy; macroeconomic policies; and institutional and geographic features. Despite the fact that we use a wide number of possible causes in a flexible statistical framework, we are unable to link most of the commonly-cited causes of the crisis to its incidence across countries. This negative finding in the cross-section makes us skeptical of the accuracy of "early warning" systems of potential crises, which must also predict their timing.
Institutional subscribers to the NBER working paper series, and residents of developing countries may download this paper without additional charge at www.nber.org.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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| Posted: |
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20 Sep 09
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Last Revised:
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12 Oct 09
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50
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Abstract:
This paper models the causes of the 2008 financial crisis together with its manifestations, using a Multiple Indicator Multiple Cause (MIMIC) model. Our analysis is conducted on a crosssection of 107 countries; we focus on national causes and consequences of the crisis, ignoring crosscountry “contagion” effects. Our model of the incidence of the crisis combines 2008 changes in real GDP, the stock market, country credit ratings, and the exchange rate. We explore the linkages between these manifestations of the crisis and a number of its possible causes from 2006 and earlier. We include over sixty potential causes of the crisis, covering such categories as: financial system policies and conditions; asset price appreciation in real estate and equity markets; international imbalances and foreign reserve adequacy; macroeconomic policies; and institutional and geographic features. Despite the fact that we use a wide number of possible causes in a flexible statistical framework, we are unable to link most of the commonly-cited causes of the crisis to its incidence across countries. This negative finding in the cross-section makes us skeptical of the accuracy of “early warning” systems of potential crises, which must also predict their timing.
empirical, data, cross section, credit, stock, country, model, international, MIMIC
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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| Posted: |
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26 Aug 09
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Last Revised:
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06 Sep 09
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0
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Abstract:
This paper models the causes of the 2008 financial crisis together with its manifestations, using a Multiple Indicator Multiple Cause (MIMIC) model. Our analysis is conducted on a cross-section of 107 countries; we focus on national causes and consequences of the crisis, ignoring cross-country contagion effects. Our model of the incidence of the crisis combines 2008 changes in real GDP, the stock market, country credit ratings, and the exchange rate. We explore the linkages between these manifestations of the crisis and a number of its possible causes from 2006 and earlier. We include over sixty potential causes of the crisis, covering such categories as: financial system policies and conditions; asset price appreciation in real estate and equity markets; international imbalances and foreign reserve adequacy; macroeconomic policies; and institutional and geographic features. Despite the fact that we use a wide number of possible causes in a flexible statistical framework, we are unable to link most of the commonly-cited causes of the crisis to its incidence across countries. This negative finding in the cross-section makes us skeptical of the accuracy of early warning systems of potential crises, which must also predict their timing.
country, credit, cross-section, data, empirical, international, MIMIC, model, stock
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18.
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Financial Integration: A New Methodology and an Illustration
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hide multiple versions |
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Robert P. Flood International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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Posted:
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05 Aug 03
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Last Revised:
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15 Feb 06
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65 (104,143) |
3
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Robert P. Flood International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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15 Feb 06
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Last Revised:
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15 Feb 06
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42
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3
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Abstract:
This paper develops a simple methodology to test for asset integration, and applies it within and between American stock markets. Our technique relies on estimating and comparing expected risk-free rates across assets. Expected risk-free rates are allowed to vary freely over time, constrained only by the fact that they must be equal across (risk-adjusted) assets in well integrated markets. Assets are allowed to have standard risk characteristics, and are constrained by a factor model of covariances over short time periods. We find that implied expected risk-free rates vary dramatically over time, unlike short interest rates. Further, internal integration in the S&P 500 market is never rejected and is generally not rejected in the NASDAQ. Integration between the NASDAQ and the S&P, however, is always rejected dramatically.
risk-free, rate, intertemporal, asset, market, expected, price, stock, conditional
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Robert P. Flood International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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05 Aug 03
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Last Revised:
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10 Oct 03
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23
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3
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Abstract:
This paper develops a simple new methodology to test for asset integration and applies it within and between American stock markets. Our technique is tightly based on a general intertemporal asset-pricing model, and relies on estimating and comparing expected risk-free rates across assets. Expected risk-free rates are allowed to vary freely over time, constrained only by the fact that they are equal across (risk-adjusted) assets. Assets are allowed to have general risk characteristics, and are constrained only by a factor model of covariances over short time periods. The technique is undemanding in terms of both data and estimation. We find that expected risk-free rates vary dramatically over time, unlike short interest rates. Further, the S&P 500 market seems to be well integrated, and the NASDAQ is generally (but not always) integrated. However, the NASDAQ is poorly integrated with the S&P 500.
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19.
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Do WTO Members have More Liberal Trade Policy?
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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Posted:
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21 Nov 02
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Last Revised:
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10 Jan 03
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56 (112,512) |
19
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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10 Jan 03
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Last Revised:
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10 Jan 03
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21
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19
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Abstract:
This Paper uses 67 measures of trade policy and trade liberalization to ask if membership in the World Trade Organization (WTO) and its predecessor the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) is associated with more liberal trade policy. Almost no measures of trade policy are significantly correlated with GATT/WTO membership. Trade liberalizations, when they occur, usually lag GATT entry by many years, and the GATT/WTO often admits countries that are closed and remain closed for years. The exception to the negative rule is that WTO members tend to have slightly more freedom as judged by the Heritage Foundation's index of economic freedom.
Empirical, measure, GATT, international, tariff, barrier, multilateral, free, data
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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21 Nov 02
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Last Revised:
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09 Jan 03
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35
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19
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Abstract:
This paper uses 68 measures of trade policy and trade liberalization to ask if membership in the World Trade Organization (WTO) and its predecessor the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) is associated with more liberal trade policy. Almost no measures of trade policy are significantly correlated with GATT/WTO membership. Trade liberalizations, when they occur, usually lag GATT entry by many years, and the GATT/WTO often admits countries that are closed and remain closed for years. The exception to the negative rule is that WTO members tend to have slightly more freedom as judged by the Heritage Foundation's index of economic freedom.
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20.
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Barry J. Eichengreen University of California, Berkeley - Department of Economics Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Charles Wyplosz University of Geneva - Graduate Institute of International Studies (HEI)
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| Posted: |
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10 Jul 00
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Last Revised:
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24 May 01
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52 (116,520)
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42
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Abstract:
This paper presents an empirical analysis of speculative attacks on pegged exchange rates in 22 countries between 1967 and 1992. We define speculative attacks or crises as large movements in exchange rates, interest rates, and international reserves. We develop stylized facts concerning the univariate behavior of a variety of macroeconomic variables, comparing crises with periods of tranquility. For ERM observations we cannot reject the null hypothesis that there are few significant differences in the behavior of key macroeconomic variables between crises and non-crisis periods. This null can be decisively rejected for non-ERM observations, however. Precisely the opposite pattern is evident in the behavior of actual realignments and changes in exchange rate regimes. We attempt to tie these findings to the theoretical literature on balance of payments crises.
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21.
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A Meta-Analysis of the Effect of Common Currencies on International Trade
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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Posted:
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30 Mar 04
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Last Revised:
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17 Aug 05
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51 (117,519) |
66
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business T. D. Stanley University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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06 Jul 05
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Last Revised:
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17 Aug 05
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21
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66
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Abstract:
Thirty-four recent studies have investigated the effect of currency union on trade, resulting in 754 point estimates of this effect. This paper uses meta-analysis to combine, explain, and to summarize these disparate estimates of common currency trade effects. The hypothesis that there is no effect of currency union on trade is easily and robustly rejected at standard significance levels. Combining these estimates implies that a currency union increases bilateral trade by between 30 and 90%. Although there is evidence of publication selection, there is also evidence of a genuine positive trade effect beyond publication bias.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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06 May 04
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Last Revised:
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13 May 04
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13
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66
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Abstract:
Thirty-four recent studies have investigated the effect of currency union on trade, resulting in 754 point estimates of the effect. This Paper is a quantitative attempt to summarize the current state of debate; meta-analysis is used to combine the disparate estimates. The chief findings are that: a) the hypothesis that there is no effect of currency union on trade can be rejected at standard significance levels; b) the combined estimate implies that a bilateral currency union increases trade by between 30% and 90%; and c) the estimates are heterogeneous and not consistently tied to most features of the studies.
Monetary, union, regression, literature, test, study, estimate
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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30 Mar 04
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Last Revised:
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06 May 04
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17
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66
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Abstract:
Thirty-four recent studies have investigated the effect of currency union on trade, resulting in 754 point estimates of the effect. This paper is a quantitative attempt to summarize the current state of debate; meta-analysis is used to combine the disparate estimates. The chief findings are that: a) the hypothesis that there is no effect of currency union on trade can be rejected at standard significance levels; b) the combined estimate implies that a bilateral currency union increase trade by between 30% and 90%; and c) the estimates are heterogeneous and not consistently tied to most features of the studies.
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22.
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Does a Currency Union Affect Trade? The Time Series Evidence
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Reuven Glick Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Center for Pacific Basin Monetary & Economic Studies Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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Posted:
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20 Jul 01
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Last Revised:
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25 Sep 01
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50 (118,575) |
129
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Reuven Glick Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Center for Pacific Basin Monetary & Economic Studies Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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07 Aug 01
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Last Revised:
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09 Aug 01
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17
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129
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Abstract:
Does leaving a currency union reduce international trade? We answer this question using a large annual panel data set covering over 230 countries from 1948-97. During this sample over one hundred pairs of countries had currency union dissolutions; they experienced economically and statistically significant declines in bilateral trade, after accounting for other factors. Assuming symmetry, we estimate that a pair of countries that starts to use a common currency experiences a doubling in bilateral trade.
Monetary, gravity, empirical, international, bilateral, country, common currency, union, fixed, random, effects, within
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Reuven Glick Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Center for Pacific Basin Monetary & Economic Studies Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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20 Jul 01
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Last Revised:
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25 Sep 01
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33
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129
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Abstract:
Does leaving a currency union reduce international trade? We answer this question using a large annual panel data set covering 217 countries from 1948 through 1997. During this sample a large number of countries left currency unions; they experienced economically and statistically significant declines in bilateral trade, after accounting for other factors. Assuming symmetry, we estimate that a pair of countries that starts to use a common currency experiences a doubling in bilateral trade.
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23.
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Non-Economic Engagement and International Exchange: The Case of Environmental Treaties
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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Posted:
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03 Jan 07
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Last Revised:
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14 May 08
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48 (120,776) |
2
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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| Posted: |
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14 May 08
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Last Revised:
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14 May 08
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1
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2
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Abstract:
We examine the role of non-economic partnerships in promoting international economic exchange. Since far-sighted countries are more willing to join costly international partnerships such as environmental treaties, environmental engagement tends to encourage international lending. Countries with such non-economic partnerships also find it easier to engage in economic exchanges since they face the possibility that debt default might also spill over to hinder their non-economic relationships. We present a theoretical model of these ideas, and then verify their empirical importance using a bilateral cross-section of data on international cross-holdings of assets and environmental treaties. Our results support the notion that international environmental cooperation facilitates economic exchange.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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| Posted: |
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06 Aug 07
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Last Revised:
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02 Apr 08
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25
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2
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Abstract:
We examine the role of non-economic partnerships in promoting international economic exchange. Since far-sighted countries are more willing to join costly international partnerships such as environmental treaties, environmental engagement tends to encourage international lending. Countries with such non-economic partnerships also find it easier to engage in economic exchanges since they face the possibility that debt default might also spill over to hinder their non-economic relationships. We present a theoretical model of these ideas, and then verify their empirical importance using a bilateral cross-section of data on international crossholdings of assets and environmental treaties. Our results support the notion that international environmental cooperation facilitates economic exchange.
assets, debt, trade, theory, reputation, discount, empirical, arrangement, partnership
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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| Posted: |
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03 Jan 07
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Last Revised:
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06 Aug 07
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22
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2
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Abstract:
We examine the role of non-economic partnerships in promoting international economic exchange. Since far-sighted countries are more willing to join costly international partnerships such as environmental treaties, environmental engagement tends to encourage international lending. Countries with such non-economic partnerships also find it easier to engage in economic exchanges since they face the possibility that debt default might also spill over to hinder their non-economic relationships. We present a theoretical model of these ideas, and then verify their empirical importance using a bilateral cross-section of data on international cross-holdings of assets and environmental treaties. Our results support the notion that international environmental cooperation facilitates economic exchange.
Assets, debt, trade, theory, reputation, discount, empirical, arrangement, partnership
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24.
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Estimating the Expected Marginal Rate of Substitution: Exploiting Idiosyncratic Risk
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|
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|
Robert P. Flood International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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Posted:
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13 Oct 04
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Last Revised:
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22 Aug 09
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45 (124,093) |
1
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Robert P. Flood International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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16 Dec 04
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Last Revised:
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01 Feb 05
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21
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1
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Abstract:
This Paper develops a simple but general methodology to estimate the expected intertemporal marginal rate of substitution or 'EMRS', using only data on asset prices and returns. Our empirical strategy is general, and allows the EMRS to vary arbitrarily over time. A novel feature of our technique is that it relies upon exploiting idiosyncratic risk, since theory dictates that idiosyncratic shocks earn the EMRS. We apply our methodology to two different datasets: monthly data from 1994 through 2003, and daily data for 2003. Both datasets include assets from three different markets: the New York Stock Exchange, the NASDAQ, and the Toronto Stock Exchange. For both monthly and daily frequencies, we find plausible estimates of EMRS with considerable precision and time-series volatility. We then use these estimates to test for asset integration, both within and between stock markets. We find that all three markets seem to be internally integrated in the sense that different assets traded on a given market share the same EMRS. The technique is also powerful enough to reject integration between the three stock markets, and between stock and money markets.
Stochastic, discount, factor, intertemporal integration, asset, market, price, stock
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Robert P. Flood International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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13 Oct 04
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Last Revised:
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22 Aug 09
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24
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1
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Abstract:
This paper develops a simple but general methodology to estimate the expected intertemporal marginal rate of substitution or "EMRS", using only data on asset prices and returns. Our empirical strategy is general, and allows the EMRS to vary arbitrarily over time. A novel feature of our technique is that it relies upon exploiting idiosyncratic risk, since theory dictates that idiosyncratic shocks earn the EMRS. We apply our methodology to two different data sets: monthly data from 1994 through 2003, and daily data for 2003. Both data sets include assets from three different markets: the New York Stock Exchange, the NASDAQ, and the Toronto Stock Exchange. For both monthly and daily frequencies, we find plausible estimates of EMRS with considerable precision and time-series volatility. We then use these estimates to test for asset integration, both within and between stock markets. We find that all three markets seem to be internally integrated in the sense that different assets traded on a given market share the same EMRS. The technique is also powerful enough to reject integration between the three stock markets, and between stock and money markets.
Institutional subscribers to the NBER working paper series, and residents of developing countries may download this paper without additional charge at www.nber.org.
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25.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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16 Feb 00
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Last Revised:
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02 Apr 01
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44 (125,245)
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268
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Abstract:
A gravity model is used to assess the separate effects of exchange rate volatility and currency unions on international trade. The panel data set used includes bilateral observations for five years spanning 1970 through 1990 for 186 countries. In this data set, there are over one hundred pairings and three hundred observations, in which both countries use the same currency. I find a large positive effect of a currency union on international trade, and a small negative effect of exchange rate volatility, even after controlling for a host of features, including the endogenous nature of the exchange rate regime. These effects are statistically significant and imply that two countries that share the same currency trade three times as much as they would with different currencies. Currency unions like EMU may thus lead to a large increase in international trade, with all that entails.
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26.
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Does the WTO Make Trade More Stable?
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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Posted:
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15 Jan 04
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Last Revised:
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29 Mar 04
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41 (128,800) |
16
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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05 Mar 04
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Last Revised:
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29 Mar 04
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17
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16
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Abstract:
I examine the hypothesis that membership in the World Trade Organization (WTO) and its predecessor the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) has increased the stability and predictability of trade flows. I use a large dataset covering annual bilateral trade flows between over 175 countries between 1950 and 1999, and estimate the effect of GATT/WTO membership on the coefficient of variation in trade computed over 25-year samples, controlling for a number of factors. I also use a comparable multilateral dataset. There is little evidence that membership in the GATT/WTO has a significant dampening effect on trade volatility.
Volatility, empirical, data, bilateral, coefficient, variation, panel, international, flow
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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15 Jan 04
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Last Revised:
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01 Mar 04
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24
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16
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Abstract:
I examine the hypothesis that membership in the World Trade Organization (WTO) and its predecessor the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) has increased the stability and predictability of trade flows. I use a large data set covering annual bilateral trade flows between over 175 countries between 1950 and 1999, and estimate the effect of GATT/WTO membership on the coefficient of variation in trade computed over 25-year samples, controlling for a number of factors. I also use a comparable multilateral data set. There is little evidence that membership in the GATT/WTO has a significant dampening effect on trade volatility.
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27.
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Which International Institutions Promote International Trade?
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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Posted:
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14 Mar 03
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Last Revised:
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04 Nov 05
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41 (128,800) |
23
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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01 Nov 05
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Last Revised:
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04 Nov 05
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19
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23
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Abstract:
This paper estimates the effect on international trade of three multilateral organizations intended to increase trade: (1) the World Trade Organization (WTO) and its predecessor the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT); (2) the International Monetary Fund (IMF); and (3) the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and its predecessor the Organisation for European Economic Co-operation (OEEC). I use a standard 'gravity' model of bilateral merchandise trade and a large panel dataset covering over 50 years and 175 countries. My results indicate that OECD membership has had a consistently large positive effect on trade, while accession to the GATT/WTO also increases trade.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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14 Mar 03
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Last Revised:
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01 Nov 05
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22
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23
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Abstract:
This Paper estimates the effect on international trade of three multilateral organizations intended to increase trade: 1) the World Trade Organization (WTO) and its predecessor the Generalized Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT); 2) the International Monetary Fund (IMF); and 3) the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). I use a standard 'gravity' model of bilateral merchandise trade and a large panel data set covering over 50 years and 175 countries. My results indicate that OECD membership (but neither GATT/WTO nor IMF membership) has had a consistently large positive effect on trade.
Emprircal, bilateral, panel, gravity, GATT, WTO, IMF, OEEC, OECD
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28.
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Robert P. Flood International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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04 Oct 01
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Last Revised:
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04 Oct 01
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40 (130,055)
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28
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Abstract:
This Paper tests for uncovered interest parity (UIP) using daily data for twenty-three developing and developed countries through the crisis-strewn 1990s. We find that UIP works better on average in the 1990s than in previous eras in the sense that the slope coefficient from a regression of exchange rate changes on interest differentials yields a positive coefficient (which is sometimes insignificantly different from unity). UIP works systematically worse for fixed and flexible exchange rate countries than for crisis countries, but we find no significant differences between rich and poor countries. Finally, we find evidence that varies considerably across countries and time, but is usually weakly consistent with an effective 'interest rate defence' of the exchange rate.
Developed, developing, empirical, exchange rate, fixed, floating
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29.
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Cities and Countries
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Versions (2)
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hide multiple versions |
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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Posted:
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21 Oct 05
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Last Revised:
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08 Feb 06
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39 (131,270) |
5
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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08 Feb 06
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Last Revised:
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08 Feb 06
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19
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5
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Abstract:
If one ranks cities by population, the rank of a city is inversely related to its size, a well-documented phenomenon known as Zipf's Law. Further, the growth rate of a city's population is uncorrelated with its size, another well-known characteristic known as Gibrat's Law. In this paper, I show that both characteristics are true of countries as well as cities; the size distributions of cities and countries are similar. But theories that explain the size-distribution of cities do not obviously apply in explaining the size-distribution of countries. The similarity of city- and country-size distributions is an interesting riddle.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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21 Oct 05
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Last Revised:
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10 Jan 06
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20
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5
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Abstract:
If one ranks cities by population, the rank of a city is inversely related to its size, a well-documented phenomenon known as Zipf's Law. Further, the growth rate of a city's population is uncorrelated with its size, another well-known characteristic known as Gibrat's Law. In this paper, I show that both characteristics are true of countries as well as cities; the size distributions of cities and countries are similar. But theories that explain the size-distribution of cities do not obviously apply in explaining the size-distribution of countries. The similarity of city- and country-size distributions is an interesting riddle.
Distribution, Zipf, Gibrat, empirical, mean, growth, rank, size, logarithm
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30.
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Jeffrey A. Frankel Harvard University - John F. Kennedy School of Government Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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03 Oct 96
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Last Revised:
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07 May 00
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38 (132,530)
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247
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Abstract:
A country's suitability for entry into a currency union depends on a number of economic conditions. These include, inter alia, the intensity of trade with other potential members of the currency union, and the extent to which domestic business cycles are correlated with those of the other countries. But international trade patterns and international business cycle correlations are endogenous. This paper develops and investigates the relationship between the two phenomena. Using thirty years of data for twenty industrialized countries, we uncover a strong and striking empirical finding: countries with closer trade links tend to have more tightly correlated business cycles. It follows that countries are more likely to satisfy the criteria for entry into a currency union after taking steps toward economic integration than before.
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31.
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Robert C. Feenstra University of California, Davis - Department of Economics James R. Markusen University of Colorado at Boulder - Department of Economics Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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09 Feb 99
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Last Revised:
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08 May 00
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34 (137,795)
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15
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Abstract:
This paper argues that the theoretical foundations for the gravity equation are general, while the empirical performance of the gravity equation is specific to the type of goods examined. Most existing theory for the gravity equation depends on the assumption of differentiated goods. We show that the gravity equation can also be derived from a reciprocal dumping' model of trade in homogeneous goods. The different theories have different testable implications. Theoretically, the gravity equation should have a lower domestic income elasticity for exports of homogeneous goods than of differentiated goods, because of a home market' effect which depends on barriers to entry. We quantify the home market effect empirically using cross-sectional gravity equations, and find that domestic income export elasticities are indeed substantially higher for differentiated goods than for homogeneous goods.
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32.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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20 Nov 06
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Last Revised:
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19 Apr 07
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33 (139,210)
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13
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Abstract:
A stable international monetary system has emerged since the early 1990s. A large number of industrial and a growing number of developing countries now have domestic inflation targets administered by independent and transparent central banks. These countries place few restrictions on capital mobility and allow their exchange rates to float. The domestic focus of monetary policy in these countries does not have any obvious international cost. Inflation targeters have lower exchange rate volatility and less frequent "sudden stops" of capital flows than similar countries that do not target inflation. Inflation targeting countries also do not have current accounts or international reserves that look different from other countries. This system was not planned and does not rely on international coordination. There is no role for a center country, the IMF, or gold. It is durable; in contrast to other monetary regimes, no country has been forced to abandon an inflation-targeting regime. Succinctly, it is the diametric opposite of the post-war system; Bretton Woods, reversed.
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33.
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Size Really Doesn't Matter: In Search of a National Scale Effect
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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Posted:
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06 Jan 06
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Last Revised:
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14 Jul 09
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33 (139,210) |
6
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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20 Jul 06
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Last Revised:
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14 Jul 09
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18
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6
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Abstract:
I search for a %u201Cscale%u201D effect in countries. I use a panel data set that includes 200 countries over forty years and link the population of a country to a host of economic and social phenomena. Using both graphical and statistical techniques, I search for an impact of size on the level of income, inflation, material well-being, health, education, the quality of a country%u2019s institutions, heterogeneity, and a number of different international indices and rankings. I have little success; small countries are more open to international trade than large countries, but are not systematically different otherwise.
Institutional subscribers to the NBER working paper series, and residents of developing countries may download this paper without additional charge at www.nber.org.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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06 Jan 06
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Last Revised:
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07 Mar 06
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15
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6
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| |
Abstract:
I search for a 'scale' effect in countries. I use a panel data set that includes 200 countries over forty years and link the population of a country to a host of economic and social phenomena. Using both graphical and statistical techniques, I search for an impact of size on the level of income, inflation, material well-being, health, education, the quality of a country's institutions, heterogeneity, and a number of different international indices and rankings. I have little success; small countries are more open to international trade than large countries, but are not systematically different otherwise.
Population, big, empirical, data, country, cross-section, panel, international
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34.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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26 Apr 03
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Last Revised:
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30 Jan 05
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32 (140,637)
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7
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Abstract:
No abstract available.
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35.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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14 Dec 06
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Last Revised:
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14 Dec 06
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31 (142,112)
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4
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| |
Abstract:
A stable international monetary system has emerged since the early 1990s. A large number of industrial and a growing number of developing countries now have domestic inflation targets administered by independent and transparent central banks. These countries place few restrictions on capital mobility and allow their exchange rates to float. The domestic focus of monetary policy in these countries does not have any obvious international cost. Inflation targeters have lower exchange rate volatility and less frequent "sudden stops" of capital flows than similar countries that do not target inflation. Inflation targeting countries also do not have current accounts or international reserves that look different from other countries. This system was not planned and does not rely on international coordination. There is no role for a center country, the IMF, or gold. It is durable; in contrast to other monetary regimes, no country has yet abandoned an inflation-targeting regime in crisis. Succinctly, it is the diametric opposite of the post-war system; Bretton Woods, reversed.
Fixed, inflation, exchange, rate, capital, controls, finance, durable, regime
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36.
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Jonathan Ostry International Monetary Fund (IMF) Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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15 Feb 06
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Last Revised:
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15 Feb 06
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31 (142,112)
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Abstract:
This paper examines the macroeconomic impact of tariffs. Existing theoretical models do not provide clear-cut predictions concerning the co-movement between unilateral tariff changes and a set of macroeconomic variables consisting of the real exchange rate, the trade balance, and the level of output. Three different data sets are found to be consistent with the hypothesis that tariffs have no statistically significant impact on the trade balance, the real exchange rate, or the level of output.
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37.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Charles M. Engel University of Wisconsin - Madison - Department of Economics
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| Posted: |
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06 Feb 01
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Last Revised:
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01 Apr 01
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31 (142,112)
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65
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Abstract:
This paper characterizes the integration patterns of international currency unions (such as the CFA Franc zone and the East Caribbean Currency Area). We empirically explore different features of currency unions, and compare them both to countries with sovereign monies, and to regions within nations. We ask: are countries within international currency unions as integrated as regions within political unions? We do this by examining the criteria for Mundell's concept of an optimum currency area. We find that members of currency unions are more integrated than countries with their own currencies, but less integrated than regions within a country. For instance, we find that currency union members have more trade and less volatile real exchange rates than countries with their own monies, but less trade and more volatile exchange rates than regions within individual countries. Similarly, business cycles are more highly synchronized across currency union countries than across countries with sovereign monies, but not as synchronized as regions of a single country. Finally, currency union membership is not associated with significantly greater risk sharing, though risk sharing is widespread within countries.
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38.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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27 Aug 00
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Last Revised:
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27 Aug 00
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31 (142,112)
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4
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Abstract:
This paper uses a panel of data from twenty-two countries between 1967 and 1992 to explore the tradeoff between the 'Holy Trinity' of fixed exchange rates, independent monetary policy, and capital mobility. I use: flexible- and sticky-price monetary exchange rate models to parameterize monetary divergence; factor analysis to extract measures of capital mobility from a variety of different indicators; and conditional exchange rate volatility to measure the degree to which the exchange rate is fixed. Exchange rate volatility is loosely linked to both monetary divergence and the degree of capital mobility. Interestingly, exchange rate volatility is significantly correlated with the width of the explicitly declared exchange rate band, even after taking monetary divergence and capital mobility into account.
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39.
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Fiscal Divergence and Business Cycle Synchronization: Irresponsibility is Idiosyncratic
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|
Zsolt Darvas Budapest University of Economic Sciences and Public Administration Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Gyorgy Szapary National Bank of Hungary
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Posted:
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01 Sep 05
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Last Revised:
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22 Dec 05
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30 (143,661) |
15
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Zsolt Darvas Budapest University of Economic Sciences and Public Administration Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Gyorgy Szapary National Bank of Hungary
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| Posted: |
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01 Sep 05
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Last Revised:
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22 Dec 05
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14
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15
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Abstract:
Using a panel of 21 OECD countries and 40 years of annual data, we find that countries with similar government budget positions tend to have business cycles that fluctuate more closely. That is, fiscal convergence (in the form of persistently similar ratios of government surplus/deficit to GDP) is systematically associated with more synchronized business cycles. We also find evidence that reduced fiscal deficits increase business cycle synchronization. The Maastricht 'convergence criteria', used to determine eligibility for EMU, encouraged fiscal convergence and deficit reduction. They may thus have indirectly moved Europe closer to an optimum currency area, by reducing countries' abilities to create idiosyncratic fiscal shocks. Our empirical results are economically and statistically significant, and robust.
European, monetary, union, policy, Maastricht, criteria, optimum, Mundell
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Zsolt Darvas Budapest University of Economic Sciences and Public Administration Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Gyorgy Szapary National Bank of Hungary
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| Posted: |
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17 Oct 05
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Last Revised:
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22 Dec 05
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16
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15
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Abstract:
Using a panel of 21 OECD countries and 40 years of annual data, we find that countries with similar government budget positions tend to have business cycles that fluctuate more closely. That is, fiscal convergence (in the form of persistently similar ratios of government surplus/deficit to GDP) is systematically associated with more synchronized business cycles. We also find evidence that reduced fiscal deficits increase business cycle synchronization. The Maastricht "convergence criteria", used to determine eligibility for EMU, encouraged fiscal convergence and deficit reduction. They may thus have indirectly moved Europe closer to an optimum currency area, by reducing countries' abilities to create idiosyncratic fiscal shocks. Our empirical results are economically and statistically significant, and robust.
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40.
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Benjamin E. Hermalin University of California, Berkeley Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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23 Jun 99
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Last Revised:
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14 May 00
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29 (145,369)
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2
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Abstract:
This paper provides a framework for understanding the risks to borrowers and lenders in capital markets. We begin with a description of a capital markets in a domestic context. This allows us to focus on two key imperfections which lie at the heart of all financial systems: imperfect information, and the difficulty of making credible commitments for repayment. In the international context, these problems tend to be exacerbated. There are also two sources of risk in international borrowing that are absent in a purely domestic context: the risk that sovereign borrowers will default, and the risk of macroeconomic instability that stems from the impact of net capital flows on the monetary system.
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41.
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Jeffrey A. Frankel Harvard University - John F. Kennedy School of Government Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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07 Aug 00
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Last Revised:
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07 Aug 00
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26 (151,187)
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57
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Abstract:
We use a panel of annual data for over one hundred developing countries from 1971 through 1992 to characterize currency crashes. We define a currency crash as a large change of the nominal exchange rate that is also a substantial increase in the rate of change of nominal depreciation. We examine the composition of the debt as well as its level, and a variety of other macroeconomic factors, external and foreign. Crashes tend to occur when: output growth is low; the growth of domestic credit is high; and the level of foreign interest rates is high. A low ratio of FDI to debt is consistently associated with a high likelihood of a crash.
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42.
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Olivier Jeanne International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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30 Apr 00
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Last Revised:
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28 Nov 02
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26 (151,187)
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49
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Abstract:
Both the literature and new empirical evidence show that exchange rate regimes differ primarily by the noisiness of the exchange rate, not be measurable macroeconomic fundamentals. This motivates a theoretical analysis of exchange rate regimes with noise traders. The presence of noise traders can lead to multiple equilibria in the foreign exchange market. The entry of noise traders both create and share the risk associated with exchange rate volatility. In such circumstances, monetary policy can be used to lower exchange rate volatility without altering macroeconomic fundamentals.
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43.
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The Olympic Effect
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|
Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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Posted:
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13 Apr 09
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Last Revised:
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16 Apr 09
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25 (153,454) |
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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| Posted: |
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15 Apr 09
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Last Revised:
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15 Apr 09
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2
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Abstract:
Economists are skeptical about the economic benefits of hosting "mega-events" such as the Olympic Games or the World Cup, since such activities have considerable cost and seem to yield few tangible benefits. These doubts are rarely shared by policy-makers and the population, who are typically quite enthusiastic about such spectacles. In this paper, we reconcile these positions by examining the economic impact of hosting mega-events like the Olympics; we focus on trade. Using a variety of trade models, we show that hosting a mega-event like the Olympics has a positive impact on national exports. This effect is statistically robust, permanent, and large; trade is around 30% higher for countries that have hosted the Olympics. Interestingly however, we also find that unsuccessful bids to host the Olympics have a similar positive impact on exports. We conclude that the Olympic effect on trade is attributable to the signal a country sends when bidding to host the games, rather than the act of actually holding a mega-event. We develop a political economy model that formalizes this idea, and derives the conditions under which a signal like this is used by countries wishing to liberalize.
candidate, data, host, liberalization, mega-event, model, signaling, trade
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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| Posted: |
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13 Apr 09
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Last Revised:
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16 Apr 09
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23
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Abstract:
Economists are skeptical about the economic benefits of hosting "mega-events" such as the Olympic Games or the World Cup, since such activities have considerable cost and seem to yield few tangible benefits. These doubts are rarely shared by policy-makers and the population, who are typically quite enthusiastic about such spectacles. In this paper, we reconcile these positions by examining the economic impact of hosting mega-events like the Olympics; we focus on trade. Using a variety of trade models, we show that hosting a mega-event like the Olympics has a positive impact on national exports. This effect is statistically robust, permanent, and large; trade is around 30% higher for countries that have hosted the Olympics. Interestingly however, we also find that unsuccessful bids to host the Olympics have a similar positive impact on exports. We conclude that the Olympic effect on trade is attributable to the signal a country sends when bidding to host the games, rather than the act of actually holding a mega-event. We develop a political economy model that formalizes this idea, and derives the conditions under which a signal like this is used by countries wishing to liberalize.
Institutional subscribers to the NBER working paper series, and residents of developing countries may download this paper without additional charge at www.nber.org.
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44.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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22 Aug 07
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Last Revised:
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22 Aug 07
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24 (155,903)
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Abstract:
Is it better to live in a big county than a small country? In this paper I examine whether economic and social conditions vary systematically with the population of a country. Economics provides a number of theoretical reasons why country size should matter, for instance because of increasing returns to scale or because it is easier to provide public goods to a larger populace. However there is little empirical evidence that links the scale of a country size to any of a multitude of indicators of economic and social welfare.
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45.
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Robert P. Flood International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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03 May 04
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Last Revised:
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03 May 04
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24 (155,903)
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113
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Abstract:
Fixed exchange rates are less volatile than floating rates. But the volatility of macroeconomic variables such as money and output does not change very much across exchange rate regimes. This suggests that exchange rate models based only on macroeconomic fundamentals are unlikely to be very successful. It also suggests that there is no clear tradeoff between reduced exchange rate volatility and macroeconomic stability.
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46.
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Contagion and Trade: Why are Currency Crises Regional?
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Reuven Glick Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Center for Pacific Basin Monetary & Economic Studies Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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Posted:
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19 Feb 99
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Last Revised:
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19 Aug 00
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24 (155,903) |
108
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Reuven Glick Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Center for Pacific Basin Monetary & Economic Studies Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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01 Aug 00
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Last Revised:
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01 Aug 00
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24
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108
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Abstract:
Currency crises tend to be regional; they affect countries in geographic proximity. This suggests that patterns of international trade are important in understanding how currency crises spread, above and beyond any macroeconomic phenomena. We provide empirical support for this hypothesis. Using data for five different currency crises (in 1971, 1973, 1992, 1994, and 1997) we show that currency crises affect clusters of countries tied together by international trade. By way of contrast, macroeconomic and financial influences are not closely associated with the cross-country incidence of speculative attacks. We also show that trade linkages help explain cross-country correlations in exchange market pressure during crisis episodes, even after controlling for macroeconomic factors.
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Reuven Glick Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Center for Pacific Basin Monetary & Economic Studies Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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19 Feb 99
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Last Revised:
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19 Aug 00
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0
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| |
Abstract:
Currency crises tend to be regional; they affect countries in geographic proximity. This suggests that patterns of international trade are important in understanding how currency crises spread, above and beyond any macroeconomic phenomena. We provide empirical support for this hypothesis. Using data for five different currency crises (in 1971, 1973, 1992, 1994 and 1997) we show that currency crises affect clusters of countries tied together by international trade. By way of contrast, macroeconomic and financial influences are not closely associated with the cross-country incidence of speculative attacks. We also show that trade linkages help explain cross-country correlations in exchange market pressure during crisis episodes, even after controlling for macroeconomic factors.
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47.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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| Posted: |
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26 Sep 07
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Last Revised:
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14 Oct 07
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21 (164,021)
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7
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Abstract:
This article analyses the causes and consequences of offshore financial centres (OFCs). While OFCs are likely to encourage bad behaviour in source countries, they may also have unintended positive consequences, such as providing competition for the domestic banking sector. We derive and simulate a model of a home country monopoly bank facing a representative competitive OFC which offers tax advantages attained by moving assets offshore at a cost that is increasing in distance to the OFC. Our model predicts that proximity to an OFC is likely to be pro-competitive. We test and confirm the predictions empirically. OFC proximity is associated with a more competitive domestic banking system and greater overall financial depth.
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48.
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Robert P. Flood International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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14 Mar 05
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Last Revised:
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30 Apr 05
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21 (164,021)
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1
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Abstract:
This paper develops a new methodology to test financial market integration. Our technique is based on an intertemporal asset-pricing model, and relies on estimating and comparing expected discount rates across asset markets. Expected discount rates are allowed to vary freely over time, constrained only by the fact that they are equal across assets. Assets are allowed to have very general risk characteristics, and are constrained only by a linear factor model of covariances with the discount rate over short time periods. We provide a variety of domestic and international empirical illustrations of our technique, and find surprisingly little evidence of integration.
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49.
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Jeffrey A. Frankel Harvard University - John F. Kennedy School of Government Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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08 Jul 00
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Last Revised:
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08 Jul 00
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20 (166,866)
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93
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Abstract:
Previous time-series studies have shown evidence of mean- reversion in real exchange rates. Deviations from purchasing power parity (PPP) appear to have half-lives of approximately four years. However, the long samples required for statistical significance are unavailable for most currencies, and may be inappropriate because of regime changes. In this study, we re-examine deviations from PPP using a panel of 150 countries and 45 annual observations. Our panel shows strong evidence of mean-reversion that is similar to that from long time-series. PPP deviations are eroded at a rate of approximately 15% annually, i.e., their half-life is around four years. Such findings can be masked in time-series data, but are relatively easy to find in cross-sections.
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50.
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Robert P. Flood International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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30 Aug 00
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Last Revised:
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30 Aug 00
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19 (169,766)
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31
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Abstract:
Regressions of ex post changes in floating exchange rates on appropriate interest differentials typically imply that the high- interest rate currency tends to appreciate, the `forward discount puzzle.' Using data from the European Monetary System, we find that a large part of the forward discount puzzle vanishes for regimes of fixed exchange rates. That is, deviations from uncovered interest parity appear to vary in a way which is dependent upon the exchange rate regime. By using the many EMS realignments, we are also able to quantify the `peso problem.'
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51.
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Barry J. Eichengreen University of California, Berkeley - Department of Economics Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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01 Jul 00
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Last Revised:
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04 Apr 08
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18 (172,583)
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47
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Abstract:
We analyze banking crises using a panel of macroeconomic and financial data for more than one hundred developing countries from 1975 through 1992. We find that banking crises in emerging markets are strongly associated with adverse external conditions. In particular Northern interest rates are strongly associated with the onset of banking crises in developing countries, even after taking into account a host of internal macroeconomic factors. A one percent increase in Northern interest rates is associated with an increase in the probability of Southern banking crises of around three percent. Our results also seem insensitive to the effects of differing exchange rate regimes, external debt burdens and domestic financial structures.
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52.
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Cross-Country Causes and Consequences of the 2008 Crisis: International Linkages and American Exposure
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Versions (2)
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hide multiple versions |
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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Posted:
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21 Sep 09
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Last Revised:
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19 Oct 09
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17 (175,480) |
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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| Posted: |
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07 Oct 09
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Last Revised:
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07 Oct 09
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1
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Abstract:
This paper models the causes of the 2008 financial crisis together with its manifestations, using a Multiple Indicator Multiple Cause (MIMIC) model. Our analysis is conducted on a cross-section of 85 countries; we focus on international linkages that may have allowed the crisis to spread across countries. Our model of the cross-country incidence of the crisis combines 2008 changes in real GDP, the stock market, country credit ratings, and the exchange rate. We explore the linkages between these manifestations of the crisis and a number of its possible causes from 2006 and earlier. The causes we consider are both national (such as equity market run-ups that preceded the crisis) and, critically, international financial and real linkages between countries and the epicenter of the crisis. We consider the United States to be the most natural origin of the 2008 crisis, though we also consider six alternative sources of the crisis. A country holding American securities that deteriorate in value is exposed to an American crisis through a financial channel. Similarly, a country which exports to the United States is exposed to an American downturn through a real channel. Despite the fact that we use a wide number of possible causes in a flexible statistical framework, we are unable to find strong evidence that international linkages can be clearly associated with the incidence of the crisis. In particular, countries heavily exposed to either American assets or trade seem to behave little differently than other countries; if anything, countries seem to have benefited slightly from American exposure.
asset, common, contagion, country, credit, cross-section, data, empirical, export, financial, international, MIMIC, model, stock, trade
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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| Posted: |
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21 Sep 09
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Last Revised:
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19 Oct 09
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16
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| |
Abstract:
This paper models the causes of the 2008 financial crisis together with its manifestations, using a Multiple Indicator Multiple Cause (MIMIC) model. Our analysis is conducted on a cross-section of 85 countries; we focus on international linkages that may have allowed the crisis to spread across countries. Our model of the cross-country incidence of the crisis combines 2008 changes in real GDP, the stock market, country credit ratings, and the exchange rate. We explore the linkages between these manifestations of the crisis and a number of its possible causes from 2006 and earlier. The causes we consider are both national (such as equity market run-ups that preceded the crisis) and, critically, international financial and real linkages between countries and the epicenter of the crisis. We consider the United States to be the most natural origin of the 2008 crisis, though we also consider six alternative sources of the crisis. A country holding American securities that deteriorate in value is exposed to an American crisis through a financial channel. Similarly, a country which exports to the United States is exposed to an American downturn through a real channel. Despite the fact that we use a wide number of possible causes in a flexible statistical framework, we are unable to find strong evidence that international linkages can be clearly associated with the incidence of the crisis. In particular, countries heavily exposed to either American assets or trade seem to behave little differently than other countries; if anything, countries seem to have benefited slightly from American exposure.
Institutional subscribers to the NBER working paper series, and residents of developing countries may download this paper without additional charge at www.nber.org.
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53.
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Fertility and the Real Exchange Rate
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Versions (3)
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Export Bibliographic Info |
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Saktiandi Supaat Government of the Republic of Singapore - Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS)
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Posted:
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13 Jul 07
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Last Revised:
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30 May 09
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17 (175,480) |
2
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Saktiandi Supaat Government of the Republic of Singapore - Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) Jacob Braude Bank of Israel
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| Posted: |
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27 Apr 09
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Last Revised:
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30 May 09
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0
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2
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Abstract:
We use a quinquennial data set covering 87 countries between 1975 and 2005 to investigate empirically the relationship between fertility and the real effective exchange rate. Theoretically, a country experiencing a decline in its fertility rate can be expected to experience a real depreciation. We test and confirm this hypothesis, controlling for a number of other potential determinants. We find a statistically significant and robust link between fertility and the exchange rate. Our point-estimate is that a decline in the fertility rate of one child per woman is associated with a depreciation of approximately 15% in the real effective exchange rate.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Saktiandi Supaat Government of the Republic of Singapore - Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS)
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| Posted: |
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23 May 08
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Last Revised:
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23 May 08
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1
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2
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Abstract:
We use a quinquennial data set covering 87 countries between 1975 and 2005 to investigate the relationship between fertility and the real effective exchange rate. Theoretically a country experiencing a decline in its fertility rate can be expected to have higher savings, lower investment, a current account surplus, and accordingly a real depreciation. We test and confirm this hypothesis, controlling for a host of potential determinants such as PPP deviations and the Balassa-Samuelson effect. We find a statistically significant and robust link between fertility and the exchange rate. Our point-estimate is that a decline in the fertility rate of one child per woman is associated with a depreciation of approximately .15% in the real effective exchange rate.
cross-country, data, demographic, effective, empirical, multilateral, panel
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Saktiandi Supaat Government of the Republic of Singapore - Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS)
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| Posted: |
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13 Jul 07
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Last Revised:
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05 Oct 07
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16
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2
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Abstract:
We use a quinquennial data set covering 87 countries between 1975 and 2005 to investigate the relationship between fertility and the real effective exchange rate. Theoretically a country experiencing a decline in its fertility rate can be expected to have higher savings, lower investment, a current account surplus, and accordingly a real depreciation. We test and confirm this hypothesis, controlling for a host of potential determinants such as PPP deviations and the Balassa-Samuelson effect. We find a statistically significant and robust link between fertility and the exchange rate. Our point-estimate is that a decline in the fertility rate of one child per woman is associated with a depreciation of approximately .15% in the real effective exchange rate.
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54.
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George A. Akerlof University of California, Berkeley Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Janet L. Yellen University of California, Berkeley - Economic Analysis & Policy Group
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| Posted: |
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04 Jul 04
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Last Revised:
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04 Jul 04
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17 (175,480)
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3
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Abstract:
No abstract is available for this paper.
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55.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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| Posted: |
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18 Oct 02
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Last Revised:
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18 Oct 02
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17 (175,480)
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36
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Abstract:
One reason why countries service their external debts is the fear that default might lead to shrinkage of international trade. If so, then creditors should systematically lend more to countries with which they share closer trade links. We develop a simple theoretical model to capture this intuition, then test and corroborate this idea.
Theory, empirical, panel, bilateral, bank, loan
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56.
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Antonio Fatás INSEAD Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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28 Feb 01
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Last Revised:
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09 Mar 01
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17 (175,480)
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Abstract:
This Paper is an empirical study of fiscal policy in countries with extreme monetary regimes. We study members of multilateral currency unions, dollarized countries that officially use the money of another country, and countries using currency boards. We find that belonging to an international common currency area is not associated with fiscal discipline; if anything, spending and taxes are higher inside currency unions. This effect is especially pronounced for dollarized countries that unilaterally adopt the currency of another country. Currency boards are associated with fiscal restraint.
Budget, Empirical, Government, Panel, Revenue, Spending, Tax
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57.
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Richard K. Lyons University of California, Berkeley Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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14 Jul 00
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Last Revised:
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22 Apr 08
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17 (175,480)
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Abstract:
Intraday interest rates are zero. Consequently, a foreign exchange dealer can short a vulnerable currency in the morning, close this position in the afternoon, and never face an interest cost. This tactic might seem especially attractive in times of crisis, since it suggests an immunity to the central bank's interest rate defense. In equilibrium, however, buyers of the vulnerable currency must be compensated on average with an intraday capital gain as long as no devaluation occurs. That is, currencies under attack should typically appreciate intraday. Using data on intraday exchange rate changes within the EMS, we find this prediction is borne out.
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58.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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10 Jul 00
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Last Revised:
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10 Jul 00
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15 (181,223)
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6
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| |
Abstract:
This paper addresses the issue of whether regimes of fixed exchange rates are a mechanism for shifting volatility inter- temporally. Using a panel of data covering twenty industrialized countries from 1959 through 1993, I examine the volatilities of a host of real and monetary variables. Graphical and statistical examination of the periods around 33 flotations and 81 devaluations reveals little evidence of significant increases in volatility following these events.
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59.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Lars E. O. Svensson Sveriges Riksbank
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| Posted: |
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27 Apr 00
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Last Revised:
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01 Jan 02
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15 (181,223)
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14
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Abstract:
An empirical model of time-varying realignment risk in an exchange rate target zone is developed. Expected rates of devaluation are estimated as the difference between interest rate differentials and estimated expected rates of depreciation within the exchange rate band, using French Franc/Deutsche Mark data during the European Monetary System. The behavior of estimated expected rates of appreciation accord well with the theoretical model of Bertola-Svensson (1990). We are also able to predict actual realignments with some success.
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60.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Lars E. O. Svensson Sveriges Riksbank
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| Posted: |
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26 Aug 00
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Last Revised:
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26 Aug 00
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14 (184,099)
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30
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Abstract:
Realignment expectations which measure exchange rate credibility are analyzed for European exchange rates, using daily financial data since the inception of the EMS. It is difficult to find economically meaningful relationships between realignment expectations and macroeconomic variables, although there are signs that lower inflation improves credibility. Statistically, many movements to realignment expectations are common to ERM participants. There were few indications of poor ERM credibility before late August 1992; the dimensions of the currency crisis of September 1992 appear to have taken both policy-makers and private agents largely by surprise.
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61.
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Robert C. Feenstra University of California, Davis - Department of Economics Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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13 Jul 00
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Last Revised:
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13 Jul 00
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13 (187,001)
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12
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Abstract:
We develop a procedure to rank-order countries and commodities using dis-aggregated American imports data. We find strong evidence that both countries and commodities can be ranked, consistent with the product cycle' hypothesis. Countries habitually begin to export goods to the United States according to an ordering; goods are also exported in order. We estimate these orderings using a semi-parametric methodology which takes account of the fact that most goods are not exported by most countries in our sample. Our orderings seem sensible, robust and intuitive. For instance, our country rankings derived from dis-aggregated trade data turn out to be highly correlated with macroeconomic phenomena such as national productivity levels and growth rates.
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62.
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Joseph E. Gagnon Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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15 Jan 07
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Last Revised:
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15 Jan 07
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11 (192,799)
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Abstract:
No abstract is available for this paper.
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63.
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Assaf Razin Tel Aviv University - Eitan Berglas School of Economics Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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29 Dec 06
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Last Revised:
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29 Dec 06
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9 (198,325)
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11
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Abstract:
No abstract is available for this paper.
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64.
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International Financial Remoteness and Macroeconomic Volatility
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Versions (2)
|
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Export Bibliographic Info |
|
Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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Posted:
|
|
27 May 08
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Last Revised:
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01 Oct 08
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4 (209,488) |
3
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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| Posted: |
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15 Sep 08
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Last Revised:
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01 Oct 08
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3
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3
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Abstract:
This paper shows that proximity to major international financial centers seems to reduce business cycle volatility. In particular, we show that countries that are further from major locations of international financial activity systematically experience more volatile growth rates in both output and consumption, even after accounting for political institutions, trade, and other controls. Our results are relatively robust in the sense that more financially remote countries are more volatile, though the results are not always statistically significant. The comparative strength of this finding is in contrast to the more ambiguous evidence found in the literature.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Mark M. Spiegel Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco - Economic Research Department
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| Posted: |
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27 May 08
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Last Revised:
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27 May 08
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1
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3
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| |
Abstract:
This paper shows that proximity to major international financial centers seems to reduce business cycle volatility. In particular, we show that countries that are further from major locations of international financial activity systematically experience more volatile growth rates in both output and consumption, even after accounting for domestic financial depth, political institutions, and other controls. Our results are relatively robust in the sense that more financially remote countries are more volatile, though the results are not always statistically significant. The comparative strength of this finding is in contrast to the more ambiguous evidence found in the literature.
business cycle, capital, cross-section, data, distance, empirical, proximity
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65.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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21 May 08
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Last Revised:
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21 May 08
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2 (213,458)
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| |
Abstract:
This paper studies the characteristics of departures from monetary unions. During the post-war period, almost seventy distinct countries or territories have left a currency union, while over sixty have remained continuously in currency unions. I compare countries leaving currency unions to those remaining within them, and find that leavers tend to be larger, richer, and more democratic; they also tend to have higher inflation. However, there are typically no sharp macroeconomic movements before, during, or after exits.
country, data, empirical, monetary, panel, probit, statistic
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66.
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Robert P. Flood International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
|
10 Jun 08
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Last Revised:
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29 Sep 08
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1 (215,617)
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1
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| |
Abstract:
This paper applies the Meese-Rogoff (1983a) methodology to the stock market. We compare the out-of-sample forecasting accuracy of various time-series and fundamentals-based models of aggregate stock prices. We stick as close as possible to the original Meese-Rogoff sample and methodology. Just as Meese and Rogoff found for the case of exchange rates, we find that a random walk model of stock prices performs as well as any estimated model at one to twelve month horizons, even though we base forecasts on actual future fundamentals of dividends and earnings. Using this metric and for this sample period, aggregate stock prices seem to be as difficult to model empirically as exchange rates.
aggregate, dividend, earning, exchange, forecast, fundamental, growth, model, rate
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67.
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Robert P. Flood International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
|
26 Aug 09
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Last Revised:
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26 Aug 09
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0 (0)
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| |
Abstract:
Inflation targeting seems to have a small but positive effect on the synchronization of business cycles; countries that target inflation seem to have cycles that move slightly more closely with foreign cycles. Thus the advent of inflation targeting does not explain the decoupling of global business cycles, for two reasons. Indeed business cycles have not in fact become less synchronized across countries.
bilateral, data, empirical, GDP, insulation, regime
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68.
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Ilian Mihov INSEAD - Economics and Political Sciences Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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05 Jun 08
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Last Revised:
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05 Jun 08
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0 (0)
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2
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Abstract:
We compare the duration and performance of different monetary regimes, especially the contrast between countries those that fix exchange rates and those that target inflation. Inflation targeting is a more durable policy; no country has yet been forced to abandon an inflation target, while many have abandoned fixed exchange rates. Indeed, even though inflation targeting began only in 1990, the duration of inflation targeting regimes is at least as long as, or longer than all alternative monetary regimes for comparable countries. Regime duration also matters in monetary policy; older regimes are typically more successful than younger ones in achieving low inflation.
duration, exchange rate targeting, inflation performance, inflation targeting, monetary policy, monetary regimes, money
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69.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
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11 Sep 00
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Last Revised:
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26 Sep 00
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0 (0)
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| |
Abstract:
A gravity model is used to assess the separate effects of exchange rate volatility and currency unions on international trade. The panel data, bilateral observations for five years during 1970-90 covering 186 countries, includes 300+ observations in which both countries use the same currency. I find a large positive effect of a currency union on international trade, and a small negative effect of exchange rate volatility, even after controlling for a host of features, including the endogenous nature of the exchange rate regime. These effects, statistically significant, imply that two countries sharing the same currency trade three times as much as they would with different currencies. Currency unions like the European EMU may thus lead to a large increase in international trade, with all that that entails.
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70.
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Robert P. Flood International Monetary Fund (IMF) - Research Department Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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| Posted: |
|
19 Feb 99
|
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Last Revised:
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02 Sep 00
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0 (0)
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Abstract:
Exchange rate regimes differ primarily by the activity of the exchange rate, not observable macroeconomic "fundamentals". Fixed exchange rates are typically stable and floating exchange rates are volatile, but macro phenomena are regime-independent. Fundamentals only seem to be relevant for exchange rates at low frequencies or when inflation is high. A basic task of international finance is explaining these cross-regime differences in exchange rate volatility. The evidence suggests that a switch in exchange rate policy is accompanied by a change in market structure; macroeconomic considerations are superfluous. We formalize this observation in a non-linear model with multiple equilibria.
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71.
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Richard K. Lyons University of California, Berkeley Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business
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25 Aug 98
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Last Revised:
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25 Aug 98
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0 (0)
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Abstract:
Intraday interest rates are zero. Consequently, a foreign exchange dealer can short a vulnerable currency in the morning, close this position in the afternoon, and never face an interest cost. This tactic might seem especially attractive in times of crisis, since it suggests an immunity to the central bank's interest rate defense. In equilibrium, however, buyers of the vulnerable currency must be compensated on average with an intraday capital gain as long as no devaluation occurs. That is, currencies under attack should typically appreciate intraday. Using data on intraday exchange rate changes within the European Monetary System, we find this prediction is borne out.
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72.
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Andrew K. Rose University of California - Haas School of Business Robert C. Feenstra University of California, Davis - Department of Economics
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09 May 97
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Last Revised:
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09 Dec 97
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0 (0)
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Abstract:
We develop a procedure to rank-order countries and commodities using dis-aggregated American imports data. We find strong evidence that both countries and commodities can be ranked, consistent with the "product cycle" hypothesis. Countries habitually begin to export goods to the United States according to an ordering; goods are also exported in order. We estimate these orderings using a semi-parametric methodology which takes account of the fact that most goods are not exported by most countries in our sample. Our orderings seem sensible, robust and intuitive. For instance, our country rankings derived from dis-aggregated trade data, turn out to be highly correlated with macroeconomic phenomena such as national productivity levels and growth rates.
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