Search Results

SORT BY: PREVIOUS / NEXT
Author:Yip, Chong K. 

Working Paper
Barriers to international capital flows: who should erect them and how big should they be?

Until recently, the trend in world capital markets has been toward increasing globalization. Recent events in Latin America and Asia have caused many in policy-making circles to question whether this trend should be wholly, or at least partially, reversed. It is commonly argued that?at a minimum?countries should be given the discretion to erect such barriers, at least in certain circumstances. Recent events, then, have forced a rethinking of the desirability of unrestricted world capital flows. The general presumption appears to be that the "victims" of highly volatile capital flows should ...
FRB Atlanta Working Paper , Paper 99-6

Working Paper
Government financing in an endogenous growth model with financial market restrictions

In this paper we develop an endogenous growth model with market regulations on explicitly modeled financial intermediaries to examine the effects of alternative government financing schemes on growth, inflation, and welfare. ; We find that in the presence of binding legal reserve requirements, a marginal increase in government spending need not result in a reduction in the rate of economic growth if it is financed with an increase in the seigniorage tax rate. Raising the seigniorage tax base by means of an increase in the reserve requirement retards growth and has an ambiguous effect on ...
FRB Atlanta Working Paper , Paper 2000-17

Working Paper
A general two sector model of endogenous growth with human and physical capital

Working Papers , Paper 9303

Journal Article
Institutional Barriers and World Income Disparities

Why have the income disparities between fast-growing economies and development laggards widened over the past five decades? How important is the role played by institutional barriers with relation to technology adoption? Using cross-country analysis, we find that more-severe institutional barriers in several representative lag-behind countries actually hinder the process of structural transformation and economic development, causing these countries to fall below a representative group of fast-growing economies despite having similar or even better initial states five decades ago. We also find ...
Review , Volume 100 , Issue 3 , Pages 259-79

Working Paper
An endogenous growth model of money, banking, and financial repression

In this paper, we develop an endogenous growth model with financial intermediation to examine the effects of financial repression on growth, inflation, and welfare. By limiting the liquidity provision, binding reserve requirements always suppress economic growth while their effect on inflation is a function, among other things, of the degree of repression. For example, contrary to previous claims, if financial repression is severe enough so that an informal financial sector emerges, liberalization is inflationary. Notwithstanding, liberalization in these cases is always welfare improving. ...
FRB Atlanta Working Paper , Paper 96-4

Working Paper
On the sustainability of international coordination

FRB Atlanta Working Paper , Paper 91-3

Working Paper
Government expenditure financing in an endogenous growth model: a comparison

FRB Atlanta Working Paper , Paper 94-1

Working Paper
On government credit programs

Credit rationing is a common feature of most developing economies. In response to it, the governments of these countries often operate extensive credit programs and lend, either directly or indirectly, to the private sector. We analyze the macroeconomic consequences of a typical government credit program in a small open economy. We show that such programs increase long-run production if the economy is in a development trap and that such programs often lead to endogenously arising aggregate volatility. On the other hand, they may eliminate certain indeterminacies created by endogenous credit ...
FRB Atlanta Working Paper , Paper 98-2

Journal Article
International policy coordination: can we have our cake and eat it too?

Economic Review , Issue May , Pages 1-12

FILTER BY year

FILTER BY Series

FILTER BY Content Type

FILTER BY Author

FILTER BY Jel Classification

E24 1 items

O15 1 items

O41 1 items

O43 1 items

O47 1 items

R23 1 items

show more (1)

PREVIOUS / NEXT