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Economic Research Working Papers
Working
papers from the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas
are preliminary drafts circulated for professional comment.
2003
| 2002 | 2001
| 2000 | 1999
| 1998 and earlier
1999 Working Papers
9914
Does
the Choice of Nominal Anchor Matter? [PDF]
Center for Latin American Economics Working Paper 0499
David M. Gould
The conventional wisdom on nominal anchors is that exchange rate-based
inflation stabilizations lead to economic booms while monetary-based
stabilizations lead to recessions. This study finds strong evidence
against this view. Rather than determining the path of economic
growth, the choice of nominal anchor appears to be endogenously
determined by the state of the economy. To peg or manage the exchange
rate, a high level of international reserves is important, especially
when a government’s credibility is low after a period of high inflation.
After controlling for the level of international reserves and the
rate of inflation, growth after monetary-based stabilizations does
not significantly differ from that following exchange rate-based
stabilizations.
9913
Is
Foreign-Currency Indexed Debt a Commitment Technology? Some
Evidence from Brazil and Mexico [PDF]
Center for Latin American Economics Working Paper 0299 William
C. Gruben and Darryl McLeod
We examine the effects of foreign
currency-indexed debt upon inflationary expectations in Brazil and
Mexico. Conjecturing that markets will view increasing overhangs
of foreign currency-indexed debt as a commitment technology that
fiscally punishes devaluation, we test whether increasing such overhangs
will attenuate the effect of monetary growth upon inflationary expectations.
We find some econometric confirmation of these conjectures in both
the Brazilian and Mexican cases. Finding that the results are consistent
with the notion that increasing the share of dollar indexed debt
may also permit some temporary monetary independence even under
pegged exchange rate regimes, we present some evidence of independent
policy behavior during periods when are model results would suggest
it.
9912
Legal
Fee Restrictions, Moral Hazard, and Attorney Profits [PDF]
Published, Journal of Law and Economics, 44(2), Part I,
October 2001.
Rudy Santore and Alan D. Viard
When attorney effort is unobservable and certain other simplifying
assumptions (such as risk neutrality) hold, it is efficient for
an attorney to purchase the rights to a client's legal claim. However,
the American Bar Association Model Rules of Professional Conduct
prohibit this arrangement. We show that this ethical restriction,
which is formally equivalent to requiring a minimum fixed fee of
zero, can create economic rents for attorneys, even though they
continue to compete along the contingent-fee dimension. The contingent
fee is not bid down to the zero-profit level, because such a fee
does not induce sufficient attorney effort. We thereby provide a
political economy explanation for these restrictions.
9911
Oil
Price Shocks and the U.S. Economy: Where Does the Asymmetry
Originate?
Nathan S. Balke, Stephen P. A. Brown and Mine Yücel
9910
The
Role of Family Networks, Coyote Prices and the Rural Economy
in Migration from Western Mexico: 1965–1994 [PDF]
Pia M. Orrenius
The Mexico–U.S. wage gap alone cannot explain the large increases
in migration from Mexico to the United States in the last three
decades. This paper explores three alternative migration determinants:
family migrant networks, the Mexican migrant-smuggling (coyote)
industry and the rural economy. The premise of this paper is that
successive cohorts of migrants and an expanding coyote industry
have led to declines in the costs of migration partly through the
formation of networks, while the long-term decline of the rural
economy has led to increases in the gains to U.S. migration. Using
unique, source-country data collected by the Mexican Migration Project
from both migrant and non-migrant households in western Mexico,
this paper estimates how the probability of migrating is influenced
by the above determinants in two ways. First, the effect of coyote
prices and economic output are estimated using an instrumental variables
strategy in which coyote prices are instrumented for using border
enforcement hours. Second, family network effects are estimated
controlling for individual fixed effects. My findings suggest that
sibling networks are by far the most significant determinant of
initial migration, although falling coyote prices and worsened economic
conditions have also been significant push/pull factors in out migration
from western Mexico over this time period.
9909
Central
Bank Responsibility, Seigniorage, and Welfare [PDF]
Joseph H. Haslag and Joydeep Bhattacharya
Historically, countries have relied on seigniorage. In this paper,
we explore a set of features in which a benevolent government will
rely on seigniorage. We use a simple overlapping generations model
with return-dominated money. Money is valued because of a reserve
requirement. The government has to raise a fixed amount of revenue
solely for the purposes of making transfers to the old. It has two
revenue-generating options: lump-sum taxes (money creation) under
the control of the treasury (central bank). We restrict the amount
of seigniorage collected to be nonnegative and require that the
government's budget constraint be satisfied on a per-period basis.
Our question is, Can we find stationary monetary competitive equilibria
that are welfare maxima, given that the money stock cannot contract?
Computational experiments reveal, somewhat surprisingly, that the
answer is yes. Indeed, in our setup, benevolent governments may
require that at least part, if not all, of the revenue be raised
via money creation.
9908
Autocracy,
Democracy, Bureaucracy, or Monopoly: Can You Judge a Government
by Its Size?
Stephen P.A. Brown and Jason L. Saving
9907
Bank
Structure, Capital Accumulation and Growth: A Simple Macroeconomic
Model [PDF]
Revised March 2000, published Economic Theory, Vol 16,
2000, pp. 421–455
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.
9906
Has
Monetary Policy Become Less Effective? [PDF]
Joseph H. Haslag
High-powered money has been declining relative to nominal GDP in
the United States. Does the ability of monetary policy to affect
aggregate activity decline as the money-income ratio falls? In this
paper, I specify simple model economy, examining the effects that
monetary policy actions and financial innovation would have on the
equilibrium money-income ratio. The downward trend in the money-income
ratio can be accounted for by increasing inflation, falling reserve
requirements, or steady financial development. Whereas higher inflation
and falling reserve requirements would reduce the potency of monetary
policy, monetary policy's effects are invariant to financial innovation.
9905
When
Does Financial Liberalization Make Banks Risky? An Empirical
Examination of Argentina, Canada and Mexico [PDF]
Center for Latin American Economics Working Paper 0399
William C. Gruben, Jahyeong Koo and Robert R. Moore
In the literature on systemic banking crises, two common themes
are: (1) lack of market discipline encourages risky lending and
(2) financial liberalization or privatization lead to risky lending.
However, there is evidence to suggest that neither financial liberalization
nor weak market discipline always precedes risky lending. We test
for depositor discipline and, separately for post-liberalization
or post-privatization risky lending in Argentina, Canada, and Mexico.
In the countries without market discipline, lending risk increases
significantly in the wake of liberalization. Where depositors discipline
banks, banks neither behave riskily nor does their risk increase
in the wake of privatization.
9904
Privatization,
Competition, and Supercompetition in the Mexican Commercial
Banking System [PDF]
Center for Latin American Economics Working Paper 0199
William C. Gruben and Robert P. McComb
9903
Core
Inflation: A Review of Some Conceptual Issues [PDF]
Mark A. Wynne
This paper reviews various approaches to the measurement of core
inflation that have been proposed in recent years. The objective
is to determine whether the European Central Bank (ECB) should pay
special attention to one or other of these measures in assessing
inflation developments in the euro area. I put particular emphasis
on the conceptual and practical problems that arise in the measurement
of core inflation, and propose some criteria that could be used
by the ECB to choose a core inflation measure.
9902
Financial
Repression, Financial Development and Economic Growth [PDF]
Joseph H. Haslag and Jahyeong Koo
In this paper, we examine the empirical relationship between financial
repression, financial development, and growth. Theory has developed
in which financial repression and growth are linked. The main contribution
of this paper is to look at two parts. First, what, if any, is the
empirical link between financial repression and growth, controlling
for the level of financial development. Second, is there an empirical
link between financial repression and financial development?
9901
Seigniorage
in a Neoclassical Economy: Some Computational Results [PDF]
Joydeep Bhattacharya and Joseph H. Haslag
In this paper, we consider a government that executes a permanent
open market sale. The government is forced to eventually use money
creation to pay for the debt's expenses, choosing between changing
either the money growth rate (the inflation-tax rate) or the reserve
requirement ratio (the inflation-tax base). We first derive conditions
under which each of the two second-best alternative policies are
feasible in an economy with neoclassical production. Armed with
these conditions, we ask the following question: Which monetary
policy action is better in a welfare sense? With neoclassical production,
monetary policy potentially has long-run effects on the capital
stock and the marginal product of capital. The curvature of the
production function is crucial. The computational experiments show,
somewhat surprisingly, that a permanent increase in government bonds
is financed by either lower reserve requirements or faster money
growth. Accordingly, steady-state welfare for all generations is
higher under the reserve-requirement policy.
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