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Author:Green, Edward J. 

Journal Article
Thoughts on the Fed's role in the payment system

This essay concerns how the Federal Reserve?s role as a payment services provider can best be aligned with its broad mission to foster the integrity, efficiency, and accessibility of the U.S. payments system. A recommended strategy involves specialization in providing services where the central bank has a comparative advantage?notably, services directly related to providing a comprehensive, secure system of accounts for interbank settlement and potentially some additional services justified by economies of scope. If markets for other payment services evolve as expected, the recommended ...
Quarterly Review , Volume 25 , Issue Win , Pages 12-27

Journal Article
Formulating the imputed cost of equity capital for priced services at Federal Reserve banks

This paper was presented at the conference "Economic Statistics: New Needs for the Twenty-First Century," cosponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the Conference on Research in Income and Wealth, and the National Association for Business Economics, July 11, 2002. According to the 1980 Monetary Control Act, the Federal Reserve Banks must establish fees for their priced services to recover all operating costs as well as the imputed costs of capital and taxes that would be incurred by a profit-making firm. Since 2002, the Federal Reserve has made fundamental changes to the ...
Economic Policy Review , Issue Sep , Pages 55-81

Working Paper
Price level uniformity in a random matching model with perfectly patient traders

This paper shows that one of the defining features of Walrasian equilibrium---law of one price---characterizes equilibrium in a non-Walrasian environment of (1) random trade matching without double coincidence of wants, and (2) strategic, price-setting conduct. Money is modeled as perfectly divisible and there is no constraint on agents' money inventories. In such an environment with discounting, the endogenous heterogeneity of money balances among agents implies differences in marginal valuation of money between distinct pairs of traders, which raises the question whether decentralized trade ...
Working Paper Series , Paper WP-01-17

Journal Article
Economic perspective on the political history of the Second Bank of the United States

The Second Bank of the United States was an institution of first-rank importance, both politically and economically, during the early nineteenth century. This article uses recent contributions to theory on industrial organization and monetary economics to argue tentatively that conflict between debtors and creditors may have played a larger role in the bank's fortunes than previously thought.
Economic Perspectives , Volume 27 , Issue Q I , Pages 59-67

Report
Thoughts on the Fed's role in the payments system

2000 Annual Report Essay
Annual Report , Volume 15 , Issue Apr , Pages 6-27

Journal Article
Can a \\"credit crunch\\" be efficient?

Two observations have sometimes been viewed as evidence that the equilibrium allocations of intermediated credit markets are inefficient. First, low-income households' marginal propensity to consume is close to unity. Second, even high-income households seem to face nonprice constraints during recessions. This paper presents a model that possesses both of these features. (A recession is modeled as an economy in which the equilibrium level of investment is at its lowest possible level.) However, contrary to the conventional view, the equilibrium of this model is ex ante efficient. The model ...
Quarterly Review , Volume 15 , Issue Fall , Pages 3-17

Journal Article
Will the new $100 bill decrease counterfeiting?

A current U.S. policy is to introduce a new style of currency that is harder to counterfeit, but not immediately to withdraw from circulation all of the old-style currency. This policy is analyzed in a random matching model of money, and its potential to decrease counterfeiting in the long run is shown. For various parameters of the model, three types of equilibria are found to occur. In only one does counterfeiting continue at its initial high level. In the other two, both genuine and counterfeit old-style money go out of circulation?immediately in one and gradually in the other. There are ...
Quarterly Review , Volume 20 , Issue Sum , Pages 3-10

Journal Article
Money and debt in the structure of payments

In Scott Freeman?s (1996) model, payment system arrangements based on intermediated debt that is settled with money achieve higher welfare than does direct money payment. In a simplified version of Freeman?s model, welfare can be further improved and efficiency achieved by a monetary authority participating in a secondary market for debt or by a private intermediary using a common clearinghouse device. The analysis clarifies that ordinary private agents can assume the role of central bank or clearinghouse; no artificial agent, posited solely to play that role and endowed with special ...
Quarterly Review , Volume 23 , Issue Spr , Pages 13-29

Working Paper
Sharing the risk of settlement failure

Two policies toward payments-system risk are common, but superficially appear to be contradictory. One policy is to restrict the exposure to risk generated by one participant to other participants who are, by one measure or another, directly concerned with the risky participant. The other policy is to provide a ?safety net,? typically provided by government and funded by taxes collected from all participants and even from non-participants, to share losses due to ?systemic risk.? In this paper, we provide a model in which both of these policies can be constituents of an economically efficient ...
Working Papers , Paper 594

Conference Paper
Panel discussion: thoughts on the future of payments and central banking

Proceedings

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