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Author:Lebow, David E. 

Working Paper
Recent trends in compensation practices

According to some accounts, compensation practices have recently been undergoing marked changes, with an increasing number of firms said to be substituting lump-sum payments for regular pay increases, allowing for greater variability of remuneration across individuals or groups, and making greater use of profit sharing or stock options. Many of these practices are outside the scope of the typical measures of economy-wide compensation growth. Moreover, intensified use of these schemes ought to heighten the responsiveness of overall compensation costs to business conditions and could also, in ...
Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 1999-32

Working Paper
Inflation measurement

Inflation measurement is the process through which changes in the prices of individual goods and services are combined to yield a measure of general price change. This paper discusses the conceptual framework for thinking about inflation measurement and considers practical issues associated with determining an inflation measure's scope; with measuring individual prices; and with combining these individual prices into a measure of aggregate inflation. We also discuss the concept of "core inflation," and summarize the implications of inflation measurement for economic theory and policy.
Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 2006-43

Working Paper
An analysis of the welfare implications of alternative exchange rate regimes: an intertemporal model with an application

We construct a two-period model of an open economy and use the model to analyze the welfare implications of fixed and floating exchange regimes. Consumers have perfect foresight and save by holding domestic and foreign bonds, which are chosen according to relative interest rates, deflated by the rate of devaluation of the domestic currency. The government produces a pure public good and finances its deficits by issuing money, domestic bonds, and by foreign borrowing. The government's bonds compete with private investment, which is entirely debt financed. Foreign exchange, i.e., foreign bonds, ...
International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 273

Working Paper
Downward nominal wage rigidity: evidence from the employment cost index

We examine the extent of downward nominal wage rigidity using the microdata underlying the BLS employment cost index--an extensive, establishment-based dataset with detailed information on wage and benefit costs. We find stronger evidence of downward nominal wage rigidity than did previous studies using panel data on individuals. Firms appear able to circumvent part, but not all, of this rigidity by varying benefits: Total compensation displays modestly less rigidity than do wages alone. Given our estimated amount of rigidity, a simple model predicts that the disinflation over the 1980s would ...
Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 1999-31

Working Paper
Is the shift toward employment in services stabilizing?

Working Paper Series / Economic Activity Section , Paper 123

Working Paper
Monetary policy at near-zero interest rates

Working Paper Series / Economic Activity Section , Paper 136

Working Paper
Import competition and wages: the role of the nontradable goods sector

Working Paper Series / Economic Activity Section , Paper 115

Discussion Paper
Inflation Perceptions and Inflation Expectations

In this note, we discuss new data on consumers' perceptions of recent inflation from the University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers (MSC). Our preliminary results show that survey responses indicate inflation perceptions differ widely across individuals (with a slightly wider distribution than for inflation expectations) but the bulk of responses are between zero and five percent.
FEDS Notes , Paper 2016-12-05-2

Discussion Paper
Inflation Perceptions During the Covid Pandemic and Recovery

Since 2016, the Michigan Surveys of Consumers (MSC) have included questions on inflation perceptions—what people believe inflation to have been—that are worded symmetrically with their long-standing questions on inflation expectations. The questions on inflation perceptions are currently posed four times a year—in February, May, August, and November. Using available data at the time, Axelrod, Lebow, and Peneva (2018) concluded that inflation expectations and perceptions are very similar and that if perceptions were to change, expectations were likely to change as well.
FEDS Notes , Paper 2024-01-19-3

Working Paper
Inflation, nominal wage rigidity, and the efficiency of labor markets

Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 95-45

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