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Institution

Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

OtherDallas, Texas, United States
About: Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas is a other organization based out in Dallas, Texas, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Monetary policy & Inflation. The organization has 196 authors who have published 994 publications receiving 35508 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The trend in the world real interest rate for safe and liquid assets fluctuated close to 2% for more than a century, but has dropped significantly over the past three decades.

106 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the long-run impact of public debt expansion on economic growth and investigate whether the debt-growth relation varies with the level of indebtedness, finding no evidence for a universally applicable threshold effect in the relationship between public debt and economic growth, once they account for the impact of global factors and their spillover effects.
Abstract: This paper studies the long-run impact of public debt expansion on economic growth and investigates whether the debt-growth relation varies with the level of indebtedness. Our contribution is both theoretical and empirical. On the theoretical side, we develop tests for threshold effects in the context of dynamic heterogeneous panel data models with cross-sectionally dependent errors and illustrate, by means of Monte Carlo experiments, that they perform well in small samples. On the empirical side, using data on a sample of 40 countries (grouped into advanced and developing) over the 1965-2010 period, we find no evidence for a universally applicable threshold effect in the relationship between public debt and economic growth, once we account for the impact of global factors and their spillover effects. Regardless of the threshold, however, we find significant negative long-run effects of public debt build-up on output growth. Provided that public debt is on a downward trajectory, a country with a high level of debt can grow just as fast as its peers.

103 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A survey of recent contributions to the theory of the demand for money can be found in this article, where the authors discuss recent econometric advances in money demand estimation techniques and review evidence revealed by empirical studies of demand for alternative monetary aggregates.

103 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors estimate exchange rate pass-through into import, producer and consumer price indexes for nine OECD countries, using a method proposed by Uhlig (2005) in a Vector Autoregression (VAR) model, identifying the exchange rate shock by imposing restrictions on the signs of impulse responses for a small subset of variables.
Abstract: We estimate exchange rate pass-through (PT) into import, producer and consumer price indexes for nine OECD countries, using a method proposed by Uhlig (2005). In a Vector Autoregression (VAR) model, we identify the exchange rate shock by imposing restrictions on the signs of impulse responses for a small subset of variables. These restrictions are consistent with a large class of theoretical models and previous empirical findings. We find that exchange rate PT is less than one at both short and long horizons. Among three price indexes, exchange rate PT is greatest for import price index and smallest for consumer price index. In addition, greater exchange rate PT is found in an economy which has a smaller size, higher import share, more persistent exchange rate, more volatile monetary policy, higher inflation rate, and less volatile aggregate demand.

103 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new approach for quantifying a bank's managerial efficiency is presented, using a data-envelopment-analysis model that combines multiple inputs and outputs to compute a scalar measure of efficiency and quality.
Abstract: The dramatic rise in bank failures over the last decade has led to a search for leading indicators so that costly bailouts might be avoided. While the quality of a bank's management is generally acknowledged to be a key contributor to institutional collapse, it is usually excluded from early warning models for lack of a metric. This paper presents a new approach for quantifying a bank's managerial efficiency, using a data-envelopment-analysis model that combines multiple inputs and outputs to compute a scalar measure of efficiency and quality. An analysis of 930 banks over a five-year period shows significant differences in management-quality scores between surviving and failing institutions. These differences are detectable long before failure occurs and increase as the failure date approaches. Hence this new metric provides an important, yet previously missing, modelling element for the early identification of troubled banks.

101 citations


Authors

Showing all 202 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Lutz Kilian8125139552
Peter Egger7245717654
Francis E. Warnock411258657
Rebel A. Cole411499092
Finn E. Kydland3812321288
Daniel L. Millimet381595196
Joseph Tracy35904286
Marc P. Giannoni33855131
Ping Wang332414263
W. Scott Frame32854616
Kei-Mu Yi30817481
John V. Duca291453535
Stephen P. A. Brown281183455
Kathy J. Hayes27853075
Alexander Chudik261033907
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20232
202211
202143
202053
201947
201842