Search Results

Showing results 1 to 7 of approximately 7.

(refine search)
SORT BY: PREVIOUS / NEXT
Author:Gordon, David B. 

Working Paper
The dynamic impacts of monetary policy: an exercise in tentative identification

FRB Atlanta Working Paper , Paper 92-13

Working Paper
The capital flight \"problem.\"

This paper isolates the common themes and policy recommendations found in the capital flight literature, and evaluates their statistical, conceptual, and empirical foundations. We find that there is no basis for presuming a stable link between any measure of capital flight and a nation's growth potential or ability to meet external obligations. Thus, although popular measures of capital flight are occasionally indicative of underlying economic and political problems, "capital flight" is not generally useful as a policy target or reliable as a signal of when to intensify or mitigate efforts ...
International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 320

Working Paper
The dynamic impacts of monetary policy: an exercise in tentative identification

FRB Atlanta Working Paper , Paper 93-5

Working Paper
In search of the liquidity effect

FRB Atlanta Working Paper , Paper 91-17

Working Paper
In search of the liquidity effect

A short-run negative relationship between monetary aggregates and interest rates--the "liquidity effect"--is central to popular, political, and academic discussions of monetary policy. This paper searches for this empirical relationship. We use monthly U.S. data since 1954 to ask if the characterization of the liquidity effect is sensitive to: (i) changes in sample period; (ii) conditioning the correlations on additional variables; (iii) assuming money growth is exogenous, and (iv) treating monetary changes as anticipated or unanticipated. ; The correlations change significantly with each ...
International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 403

Working Paper
Trends in velocity and policy expectations

U.S. velocity of base money exhibits three distinct trends since 1950. After rising steadily for thirty years, it flattens out in the 1980s and falls substantially in the 1990s. This paper explores whether the observed secular movements in velocity can be accounted for exclusively by endogenous responses to changing expectations about monetary and fiscal policy. We use a model with two key features: a substitute for money in transactions and an array of assets that includes money, nominal bonds, and physical capital. The model maps policy expectations into portfolio decisions, making ...
FRB Atlanta Working Paper , Paper 97-7

Working Paper
A note on \"transfers\"

This paper attempts to provide some structure to the analysis and measurement of "net resource transfers." We go about achieving this objective in two steps. First, we use standard measures of portfolio changes and balance of payments statistics to evaluate the real resource transfers associated with financial transactions. Second, we sketch ways in which this analytical framework can be used to address the economic concerns associated with the term "net resource transfers," e.g., questions regarding the "burdens" of international debt obligations and the effects of these obligations on ...
International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 341

FILTER BY year

FILTER BY Content Type

FILTER BY Author

FILTER BY Keywords

PREVIOUS / NEXT