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Academic Publications
A list of articles published by members
of the Dallas Fed Research staff.
2003
| 2002 | 2001
| 2000
2000 Academic Publications
Credit and Economic Activity: Credit
Regimes and Nonlinear Propagation of Shocks
Review of Economics and Statistics,
May 2000
Nathan S. Balke
In this paper, we examine empirically
whether credit plays a role as a nonlinear propagator of shocks.
This propagation takes the form of a threshold vector autoregression
in which a regime change occurs if credit conditions cross
a critical threshold. Using nonlinear impulse-response functions,
we evaluate the dynamics implied by the threshold model. These
suggest that shocks have a larger effect on output in the
"tight" credit regime than is normally the case,
and that contractionary monetary shocks typically have a larger
effect than expansionary shocks. Finally, using a nonlinear
version of historical decompositions, we attempt to determine
the relative contribution to output growth of shocks and the
nonlinear structure.
An Equilibrium Analysis of Relative
Price Changes and Aggregate Inflation
Journal of Monetary Economics,
April 2000
Nathan S. Balke and Mark A. Wynne
Inflation is positively correlated with
the variability of relative prices as measured by the standard
deviation of the cross-section distribution of prices, and
also with the third moment (skewness) of the cross-section
distribution of prices. The conventional interpretation of
these relationships is that they reflect sluggishness in the
adjustment of individual prices in response to shocks. In
this paper we question this interpretation. First, we show
that similar correlations among the moments exist in alternative
measures of underlying technology shocks. Second, when these
shocks are fed into a general equilibrium model with multiple
sectors and flexible prices, the resulting prices also display
a positive correlation between aggregate inflation and skewness
of the cross-section distribution.
Inequality, Inflation, and Central
Bank Independence
Canadian Journal of Economics,
February 2000
Jim Dolmas, Gregory W. Huffman and Mark A. Wynne
What can account for the different
contemporaneous inflation experiences of various countries,
and of the same country over time? We present an analysis
of the determination of inflation from a political economy
perspective. We document a positive correlation between income
inequality and inflation and then present a theory of the
determination of inflation outcomes in democratic societies
that illustrates how greater inequality leads to greater inflation,
owing to a desire by voters for wealth redistribution. We
conclude by showing that democracies with more independent
central banks tend to have better inflation outcomes for a
given degree of inequality.
Financial Technology Shocks and the
Case of the Missing M2
Journal of Money, Credit, and
Banking, Part 1 November 2000
John V. Duca
M2 growth was unusually weak in the
early 1990s when its velocity soared. Although M2 growth subsequently
recovered, its velocity plateaued at a high level, giving
rise to a case of missing money. These swings in M2 growth
have accompanied opposite swings in bond mutual fund inflows.
M2 growth is better tracked and the "missing M2" problem is
resolved when money models are modified to account for shifts
in bond mutual fund costs. This approach avoids the capital
gains and portfolio substitution problems posed by adding
bond or equity funds to M2, while capturing the substitution
effects relevant to money demand.
Has Greater Competition Restrained
U.S. Inflation?
Southern Economic Journal,
January 2000
John V. Duca and David D. VanHoose
This paper shows how increased goods
market competition affects the behavior of inflation in a
multisector economy. By raising the price elasticity of demand,
increased goods market competition theoretically lowers inflation
and makes the aggregate price level less sensitive to aggregate
demand shocks. We find that proxies for the aggregate degree
of goods market competition are statistically and economically
significant in short-run Phillips curve models of core inflation.
Evidence indicates that heightened goods market competition
has flattened the slope of the short-run, expectations-augmented
Phillips curve and slightly lowered the nonaccelerating inflation
rate of unemployment (NAIRU).
South American Monetary and Exchange
Rate Policies: Their Implications for the FTAA
NAFTA: Law and Business
Review of the Americas, Summer 2000
William C. Gruben
The implications of participating nations'
monetary and exchange rate policies for trade relations within
the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) involve: (1) the
ability of nations to come to and stay functionally within
some formalized agreement; and (2) more directly, the ability
of participating nations to trade with each other. However,
the channels through which monetary and exchange rate policies
operate upon nations' abilities to maintain a formalized and
functional agreement are very different from the channels
through which these policies may affect trade directly. This
paper focuses on monetary and exchange rate policies jointly
because in most of the countries in the Western Hemisphere
these policies are more explicitly linked than they are in
the United States or in most other industrial nations.
Adverse Selection and Competing Deposit
Insurance Systems in Pre-Depression Texas
Journal of Financial Services
Research, September 2000
Jeffery W. Gunther, Linda M. Hooks and Kenneth J. Robinson
In 1910, Texas instituted a unique
deposit insurance program for its state chartered banks by
providing a choice between two separate plans: the depositors
guaranty fund, similar to insurance schemes in several other
states, and the depositors bond security system, which required
the procurement of a privately issued guarantee of indemnity.
While, under most deposit insurance schemes, the incentive
to monitor the financial condition of individual banks simply
devolves from depositors to regulators, the bond security
system established in Texas distinguished itself by attempting
to reintroduce market discipline through the indemnity requirement.
Using a probit model with heteroscedasticity, we find evidence
that the choice of insurance coverage led to risk-sorting
among the banks, with relatively conservative and financially
secure institutions opting for the comparatively rigorous
bond security system. In addition, the bank failure record
indicates the risk differentials between banks in the two
plans persisted over time and even possibly grew, suggesting
the bond security system at least partially avoided the moral
hazard incentives associated with the fixed-rate depositors
guaranty plan. These findings support the general view that
market discipline is effective in banking.
Bank Structure, Capital Accumulation
and Growth: A Simple Macroeconomic Model
Economic Theory, September
2000
Mark G. Guzman
This paper analyzes the equilibrium
growth paths of two economies that are identical in all respects,
except for the organization of their financial systems: in
particular, one has a competitive banking system and the other
has a monopolistic banking system. In addition, the sources
of inefficiencies, as a result of monopoly banking, and their
relationship to the existence of credit rationing are explored.
Monopoly in banking tends to depress the equilibrium law of
motion for the capital stock for either of two reasons. When
credit rationing exists, monopoly banks ration credit more
heavily than competitive banks. When credit is not rationed,
the existence of monopoly banking leads to excessive monitoring
of credit financed investment. Both of these have adverse
consequences for capital accumulation. In addition, monopoly
banking is more likely to lead to credit rationing than is
competitive banking. Finally, the scope for development trap
phenomena to arise is considered under both a competitive
and a monopolistic banking system.
Measuring Regional Cost of Living
Journal of Business & Economic
Statistics, January 2000
Jahyeong Koo, Keith R. Phillips and Fiona Sigalla
Accurate measures of regional
cost of living are vital to businesses and individuals. We
compare a commonly used regional cost-of-living index, produced
by the American Chamber of Commerce Research Association (ACCRA),
to an index we calculate using Consumer Price Index data and
research from Kokoski, Cardiff, and Moulton. We find significant
differences between the ACCRA and the new indexes that are
likely due to theoretical design, data collection, and sampling
design. The comparison of these indexes highlights sources
of differences in regional cost-of-living measures and suggests
caution in the use of ACCRA indexes.
The Composite Index of Leading Economic
Indicators: A Comparison of Approaches
Journal of Economic and Social
Measurement, Vol. 25, Issue 3-4, 1998-99
Keith R. Phillips
I compare the real-time recession
predicting performance of the Conference Board Leading Index,
the Stock and Watson Leading Index, and the yield curve in
the period since 1988. I first calculate the real-time probability
of recession for the yield curve and Conference Board Leading
Index using a simple nonlinear regime-switching model. I then
compare these estimates to the probability of recession published
by Stock and Watson. The Conference Board Leading Index gave
the strongest signal of recession in the six months prior
to the 1990-91 recession and gave no false signals in the
1990s. The Stock and Watson Leading Index failed to give recession
signals in the first half of 1990 and the yield curve may
have given a false signal in early 1999. The results show
that the traditional leading index is still a useful tool
for monitoring the ebb and flow of regional and national economies.
Dynamic Asset Pricing Effects and
Incidence of Realization-Based Capital Gains Taxes
Journal of Monetary Economics,
October 2000
Alan D. Viard
Many analyses of capital gains
taxation assume that realization-based taxes are economically
similar to accrual-based taxes. In equilibrium, however, the
distinctive implications of realization taxes for asset trading
through the lock-in effect are associated with distinctive
dynamic asset pricing effects. Asset prices are increased
by the current realization tax, to partly offset the sale
disincentive that the tax would otherwise impose. The resulting
division of the tax burden between buyers and sellers of assets
is similar to traditional public finance models of excise-tax
incidence in product markets.
Business Cycles under Monetary Union:
A Comparison of the EU and US
Economica, August 2000
Mark A. Wynne and Jahyeong Koo
This paper documents business cycle
similarities and differences among the 12 Federal Reserve
districts in the USA and the 15 countries that make up the
EU. The comparison is suggestive of what might be expected
to emerge in the way of business cycle synchronization from
a monetary union between the member states of the EU. |