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Author:Canzoneri, Matthew B. 

Working Paper
Monetary policy games and the role of private information

International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 249

Working Paper
Optimal Dynamic Capital Requirements and Implementable Capital Buffer Rules

We build a quantitatively relevant macroeconomic model with endogenous risk-taking. In our model, deposit insurance and limited liability can lead banks to make risky loans that are socially inefficient. This excessive risk-taking can be triggered by aggregate or sectoral shocks that reduce the return on safer loans. Excessive risk-taking can be avoided by raising bank capital requirements, but unnecessarily tight requirements lower welfare by limiting liquidity producing bank deposits. Consequently, optimal capital requirements are dynamic (or state contingent). We provide examples in which ...
Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 2020-056

Conference Paper
Price- and wage- inflation targeting: variations on a theme by Erceg, Henderson, and Levin

Proceedings

Working Paper
Two essays on monetary policy in an interdependent world

International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 219

Working Paper
The effects of exchange rate variability on output and employment

International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 240

Working Paper
Stability in financial and labor markets: is there a tradeoff?

International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 161

Working Paper
Wealth effects in the new neoclassical models

International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 158

Working Paper
Wage contracting, exchange rate volatility, and exchange intervention policy

International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 212

Working Paper
A new interpretation of the coordination problem and its empirical significance

In this paper, we discuss a new interpretation of what might be meant by the "coordination" of policies; in this interpretation, the policymakers are selecting a noncooperative solution rather than a cooperative solution. The new interpretation is suggested by the fact that games typically have a large number of Nash solutions, and players are not indifferent as to which occurs. The multiplicity of solutions may be due to information sharing and surveillance, the choice of policy instruments, or the adoption of reputational strategies in repeated versions of the game. The "coordination" ...
International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 340

Working Paper
Exchange intervention policy in a multiple country world

International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 174

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