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Author:Russell, Steven 

Conference Paper
Monetary policy experiments in a stochastic overlapping generations model of the term structure

Proceedings , Paper 1, pt. 2

Working Paper
Monetary policy, interest rates, and inflation: budget arithmetic revisited

FRB Atlanta Working Paper , Paper 93-12

Working Paper
The long-run real effects of monetary policy: Keynesian predictions from a neoclassical model

In this paper we integrate Diamond's (1965) model of neoclassical production and capital with Wallace's (1984) model of monetary policy in order to study the real effects of two types of monetary policy actions: open market operations and changes in reserve requirements. We show that a permanent easing of open market or reserve policy can produce permanent increases in both the inflation rate and the level (but not the growth rate) of output. We also describe conditions under which the effects of these policies on real interest rates and output can be large relative to their effects on the ...
FRB Atlanta Working Paper , Paper 98-6

Working Paper
Monetary steady states in a low real interest rate economy

We study the properties of an overlapping generations model with many-period-lived agents, neoclassical production and capital accumulation, labor-leisure decisions, population growth, and technological progress. We demonstrate that a plausibly calibrated version of this model has "monetary steady states" -Samuelson-case steady states with large real stocks of unbacked government debt. These steady states can duplicate a number of important features of U.S. postwar data, including three phenomena that challenge other sorts of calibrated models: the low average real interest rate on U.S. ...
Working Papers , Paper 1994-012

Journal Article
The Mexican economic crisis: alternative views

The authors of this article suggest that many of the explanations for the 1994 crisis are based on questionable assumptions and dubious analysis. They contend that, when trying to explain the crisis, most authors have concentrated on the wrong economic "fundamentals." They challenge the conventional view that the crisis was caused by a combination of flawed fiscal, monetary, and exchange rate policies. Their explanation for the crisis belongs in an alternative camp that emphasizes the vulnerability of the Mexican financial system to swings in expectations and investor confidence. ; In their ...
Economic Review , Volume 80 , Issue Jan , Pages 21-44

Working Paper
Open market operations with conventional, lasting real effects

FRB Atlanta Working Paper , Paper 94-15

Journal Article
Gross state product estimates for Fifth District jurisdictions

Cross Sections , Issue Sum , Pages 9-11

Journal Article
The government's role in deposit insurance

Review , Issue Jan , Pages 3-34

Working Paper
A welfare rationale for multiple reserve requirements

FRB Atlanta Working Paper , Paper 94-16

Working Paper
How costly is sustained low inflation for the U.S. economy?

We study the welfare cost of inflation in a general equilibrium life cycle model with growth, costly financial intermediation, and taxes on nominal quantities. We find a stationary equilibrium of the model matches a wide variety of facts about the postwar U.S. economy. We then calculate that the inflation policy of the monetary authority has welfare consequences for agents that are an order of magnitude larger than existing estimates in the literature. These effects are large even at very low inflation rates. The bulk of the welfare cost of inflation can be attributed to the fact that ...
Working Papers , Paper 1997-012

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