Institution
Directorate-General for Economic and Financial Affairs
Government•Brussels, Belgium•
About: Directorate-General for Economic and Financial Affairs is a government organization based out in Brussels, Belgium. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Fiscal policy & European union. The organization has 80 authors who have published 145 publications receiving 4262 citations. The organization is also known as: ECFIN & GD ECFIN.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper , the authors develop and estimate a Bayesian DSGE model that incorporates monetary and fiscal policy tailored to India, replicating food demand and food supply subsidies, and find that following a world food price shock, CPI and therefore interest rate volatility would be 21% higher in the absence of food subsidies.
3 citations
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TL;DR: The authors examines the choices in this field made at global level with the Kyoto Protocol and in Europe with the more recent 20-20-20 package from the standpoints of the Italian national interests and the negotiating stance adopted by our Government in European and international forums.
Abstract: Climate change, security and cost of energy supplies, and the competitiveness of firms and economies have been focal points of the general political and economic policy debate in recent years.
This article examines the choices in this field made at global level with the Kyoto Protocol and in Europe with the more recent “20-20-20” package from the standpoints of the Italian national interests and the negotiating stance adopted by our Government in European and international forums.
The European negotiations on renewable energy sources, the reduction of emissions in the sectors with and without emissions trading schemes, automobile emissions, the auctioning of emission rights, and the identification of industries exposed to the risk of delocalization (carbon leakage) are described in detail, including background data not previously available, and the reasons for Italy’s positions set forth.
The principle guiding Italian negotiators has been to balance the various policy aims, in an effort to ensure that the necessary action against climate change does not have excessive repercussions on growth and employment. The principle is all the more valid in the global talks on the regime that will succeed the Kyoto Protocol when it expires on 1 January 2013.
Without a credible global agreement entailing an equivalent commitment, or sectoral agreements, instruments will be needed to prevent Europe’s climate commitment from producing an unfair competitive disadvantage, with potentially serious social and economic consequences but no appreciable environmental advantage.
3 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the dynamics of the sovereign CDS term premium for five European countries and found that the strongest impacts can be attributed to CDS market liquidity, local stock returns, and overall risk aversion.
Abstract: This study investigates the dynamics of the sovereign CDS term premium for five European countries. The CDS term premium can be regarded as a forward-looking measure of idiosyncratic sovereign default risk as perceived by financial markets. Using a Markov-switching unobserved component model, we decompose the daily CDS term premium into two components of statistically different nature and link them in a vector autoregression to various daily observed financial market variables. We find that such decomposition is vital for understanding the short-term dynamics of this premium. The strongest impacts can be attributed to CDS market liquidity, local stock returns, and overall risk aversion. By contrast, the impact of shocks from the sovereign bond market is rather muted. Therefore, the CDS market microstructure effect and investor sentiment play the main roles in sovereign risk evaluation in real time. Moreover, we also find that the CDS term premium response to shocks is regime-dependent and can be ten times stronger during periods of high volatility.
3 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that differences in opinion mirror a deeper disagreement over how the budget would look like without automatic stabilisers and that the degree of smoothing is conditional on how the counterfactual budget is defined.
Abstract: The global financial and economic crisis has revived the debate in the academic literature and in policy circles about the size and effectiveness of automatic fiscal stabilisers. Especially in the euro area where monetary policy is centralised and discretionary fiscal policy making is constrained by the EU fiscal rules, knowing the size and the effectiveness of automatic stabilisers is crucial. While automatic stabilisers are a fairly established concept in the fiscal policy literature, there is still no consensus about their actual nature and their effectiveness. This paper shows that differences in opinion mirror a deeper disagreement over how the budget would look like without automatic stabilisers. This issue is addressed by defining two types of counterfactual budgets giving rise to two different interpretations about the nature of automatic stabilisation. Simulations with a structural model confirm that the degree of smoothing is conditional on how the counterfactual budget, i.e. the budget without automatic stabilisers, is defined.
2 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a new model where consumer preferences are asymmetric across varieties and heterogeneous across countries, which allows for an identification of horizontal differentiation (taste) clearly distinguished from vertical differentiation (quality).
Abstract: Many trade models of monopolistic competition identify cost efficiency as the main determinant of firm performance in export markets. To date, the analysis of demand factors has received much less attention. We propose a new model where consumer preferences are asymmetric across varieties and heterogeneous across countries. The model generates new predictions and allows for an identification of horizontal differentiation (taste) clearly distinguished from vertical differentiation (quality). Data patterns observed in Belgian firm-product level exports by destination are congruent with the predictions and seem to warrant a richer modelling of consumer demand.
2 citations
Authors
Showing all 111 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Johan F.M. Swinnen | 70 | 570 | 20039 |
Lars Jonung | 36 | 214 | 4215 |
Guntram B. Wolff | 34 | 224 | 4272 |
Marco Buti | 33 | 98 | 3852 |
Alessandro Turrini | 31 | 129 | 3000 |
Jan in 't Veld | 28 | 91 | 3074 |
Paul van den Noord | 28 | 70 | 3654 |
Salvador Barrios | 26 | 84 | 4166 |
Heiko Hesse | 24 | 56 | 3232 |
Isabel Grilo | 24 | 66 | 2967 |
Gilles Mourre | 21 | 76 | 1300 |
Bořek Vašíček | 20 | 57 | 1318 |
Alessandro Girardi | 19 | 116 | 1212 |
Ivo Maes | 19 | 87 | 1349 |
Ralph Setzer | 16 | 46 | 1162 |