Search Results

Showing results 1 to 10 of approximately 10.

(refine search)
SORT BY: PREVIOUS / NEXT
Author:Freeman, Scott 

Working Paper
Monetary aggregates and output

This paper offers a general equilibrium model that explains how the observed correlations of money and output fluctuations may come about through endogenously determined fluctuations in the money multiplier. The model is calibrated to meet long run features of the U.S. economy (including monetary features) and then subjected to shocks to the Solow residual following a random process like that observed in U.S. data. The model's predicted business-cycle frequency correlations, of both real and nominal variables, share the following features with U.S. data: i) M1 is positively correlated with ...
Working Papers , Paper 1998-013

Working Paper
Underdevelopment and the enforcement of laws and contracts

Working Papers , Paper 9110

Working Paper
The optimality of nominal contracts

Working Papers , Paper 9114

Working Paper
Clearinghouse banks and banknote over-issue

Working Papers , Paper 9326

Working Paper
On the optimality of interest-bearing reserves in economies of overlapping generations

Working Papers , Paper 9328

Working Paper
The inefficiency of seigniorage from required reserves

Working Papers , Paper 9334

Working Paper
Monetary aggregates and output

This paper offers a general equilibrium model that explains how the observed correlations of money and output fluctuations may come about through endogenously determined fluctuations in the money multiplier. The model is calibrated to meet long-run (including monetary) features of the U.S. economy; it is then subjected to shocks to the Solow residual following a random process similar to that observed in U.S. data.
Working Papers (Old Series) , Paper 9813

Conference Paper
Redemption costs and interest rates under the U.S. National Banking System

Proceedings

Journal Article
Money and output: correlation or causality?

The correlation between changes in the nation's total supply of money and subsequent changes in real output has led some people to infer that policymakers, by changing the money supply, can stimulate or moderate the nation's real output. ; Scott Freeman argues that this conclusion may be inappropriate. Freeman distinguishes inside money, the money created by banks through their lending, from outside money, the money the Federal Reserve prints. He shows that anticipatory increases in bank lending may account for the rise in the money supply that often precedes an expansion in real output. ...
Economic and Financial Policy Review , Issue Q III , Pages 1-7

Journal Article
Should bank reserves earn interest?

This article examines the effects and desirability of paying interest on required reserves. Scott Freeman and Joseph Haslag demonstrate that a policy of paying interest on reserves can make everyone better off, even if the interest must be financed by a tax on capital. An essential part of this policy is an open market operation that offsets any changes in the value of money.
Economic and Financial Policy Review , Issue Q IV , Pages 25-33

PREVIOUS / NEXT