Latest on Macroeconomics
Do Big Box Retailers Need Tax Breaks?
Is Growth Outdated?
Cashing in on the Dollar
A New Theory on Monetary Union
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Cashing in on the Dollar
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A New Theory on Monetary Union
The End of Neoliberalism and the Rebirth of History
CBS Faculty Research on Macroeconomics
Information Avoidance and Information Seeking Among Parents of Children with ASD
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- May 1, 2021
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Journal Article
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- American Journal on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
We estimated the effects of information avoidance and information seeking among parents of children diagnosed with ASD on age of diagnosis. An online survey was completed by 1,815 parents of children with ASD. Children of parents who self-reported that they had preferred "not to know," reported diagnoses around 3 months later than other children.
Redrawing the Map of Global Capital Flows: The Role of Cross-Border Financing and Tax Havens
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- May 1, 2021
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Journal Article
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- The Quarterly Journal of Economics
Global firms finance themselves through foreign subsidiaries, often shell companies in tax havens, which obscures their true economic location in official statistics. We associate the universe of traded securities issued by firms in tax havens with their issuer’s ultimate parent and restate bilateral investment positions to better reflect the financial linkages connecting countries around the world. Bilateral portfolio investment from developed countries to firms in large emerging markets is dramatically larger than previously thought.
Credit Supply, Firms, and Earnings Inequality
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- April 16, 2021
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Working Paper
We study the distributional consequences of monetary policy-induced credit supply in the labor market. To this end, we construct a novel dataset that links worker employment histories to firm financials and banking relationships in Germany. Firms in relationships with banks that are more exposed to the introduction of negative interest rates in 2014 experience a relative contraction in credit supply, associated with lower average wages and employment. These effects are heterogeneous within and between firms.
The Aggregate and Distributional Effects of Spatial Frictions
We develop a general equilibrium model of frictional labor reallocation across firms and regions, and use it to quantify the aggregate and distributional effects of spatial frictions that hinder worker mobility across regions in Germany. The model leverages matched employer-employee data to unpack spatial frictions into different types while isolating them from labor market frictions that operate also within region.
Optimal Fiscal Policy without Commitment: Revisiting Lucas-Stokey
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- March 24, 2021
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Journal Article
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- Journal of Political Economy
According to the Lucas-Stokey result, a government can structure its debt maturity to guarantee commitment to optimal fiscal policy by future governments. In this paper, we overturn this conclusion, showing that it does not generally hold in the same model and under the same definition of time-consistency as in Lucas-Stokey. Our argument rests on the existence of an overlooked commitment problem that cannot be remedied with debt maturity: a government in the future will not necessarily tax above the peak of the Laffer curve, even if it is ex-ante optimal to do so.
Mechanism Design with Limited Commitment
We develop a tool akin to the revelation principle for mechanism design with limited commitment. We identify a canonical class of mechanisms rich enough to replicate the payoffs of any equilibrium in a mechanism-selection game between an uninformed designer and a privately informed agent. A cornerstone of our methodology is the idea that a mechanism should encode not only the rules that determine the allocation, but also the information the designer obtains from the interaction with the agent.
Earnings Inequality and Dynamics in the Presence of Informality: The Case of Brazil
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- February 24, 2021
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Working Paper
Using rich administrative and household survey data, we document a series of new facts on earnings inequality and dynamics in a developing country with a large informal sector: Brazil. Since the mid-1990s, both inequality and volatility of earnings have declined significantly in Brazil's formal sector. Higher-order moments of the distribution of earnings innovations show cyclical movements in Brazil that are similar to those in developed countries like the US. Earnings mobility is comparatively high, especially at the bottom of the distribution.
The Evolution of the Earnings Distribution in a Volatile Economy: Evidence from Argentina
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- February 18, 2021
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Working Paper
This paper studies earnings inequality and dynamics in Argentina between 1996 and 2015. Following the 2001-2002 crisis, the Argentine economy transitioned from a low- to a high-inflation regime. At the same time, the number of collective bargaining agreements increased and the minimum wage adjustments became more frequent. We document that this macroeconomic transition was associated with a persistent decrease in the dispersion of real earnings and cyclical movements in higher-order moments of the distribution of earnings innovations.
Uncertainty and the Economy: The Evolving Distributions of Aggregate Supply and Demand Shocks
We estimate the time-varying distribution of aggregate supply (AS) and aggregate demand (AD) shocks. We distinguish between traditional Gaussian uncertainty and "bad" uncertainty, associated with negative skewness. The Great Moderation is driven by a reduction in the volatility of AS shocks and the Gaussian component of AD shocks. The increased role of "bad" demand uncertainty implies that the conditional skewness of GDP growth and inflation has decreased over time. The correlation between AS/AD shocks and shocks to their conditional volatilities is generally strongly negative.