Institution
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Other•Dallas, 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 published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that countries may reduce their costs of meeting carbon constraints if they penalize fuels not only on the basis of their carbon intensity but also on their import-export status.
39 citations
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TL;DR: The Database of Global Economic Indicators (DGEI) from the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas aims to standardize and disseminate economic indicators for policy analysis and scholarly work on the role of globalization as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: The Database of Global Economic Indicators (DGEI) from the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas aims to standardize and disseminate economic indicators for policy analysis and scholarly work on the role of globalization. Its main purpose is to offer a broad perspective on a number of global factors affecting the U.S. economy. DGEI indicators are based on a core sample of 40 countries with aggregates for the rest of the world (ex. the U.S.) and by level of development attainment and openness to trade. DGEI indicators currently include real GDP, industrial production (IP), Purchasing Managers Index (PMI), merchandise exports and imports, headline CPI, core CPI (ex. food and energy), PPI/WPI inflation, nominal and real exchange rates, and short-term interest rates. Here we describe our methodology to transform and combine different time series, for temporal and cross-country aggregation, and to highlight the importance of using representative data in international macroeconomics research. Our paper makes a related contribution to the literature by providing a formal assessment of conventional interpolation methods used to adjust the data frequency. A selection of the DGEI-derived global indicators – to be updated monthly – can be accessed at the following URL: http://www.dallasfed.org/institute/dgei/index.cfm.
39 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors explain the institutional background for this effect and quantify its importance, and show that relatively minor institutional changes could have neutralized the damaging effects of the collateral constraints, and discuss why the institutions have their current structure.
Abstract: In the current structure of the U.S. residential mortgage market, a fall in property values may make it very difficult for homeowners to refinance their mortgages to take advantage of falling interest rates. In this paper, we explain the institutional background for this effect and quantify its importance. We confirm that this form of collateral constraint has greatly reduced recent refinancing in states with depressed property markets. We also point to the many ways in which the reduction in refinancing may have inflicted additional damage in these already recession-hit states. Finally, we show that relatively minor institutional changes could have neutralized the damaging effects of the collateral constraints, and we discuss why the institutions have their current structure.
39 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, a variable selection method was used to identify the macroeconomic drivers of banking variables combined with a principal component analysis, which can be used to make projections, conditional on exogenous paths of macroeconomic variables.
Abstract: We propose a simple, parsimonious, and easily implementable method for stress-testing banks using a top-down approach that evaluates the impact of shocks to macroeconomic variables on banks' capitalization. Our method relies on a variable selection method to identify the macroeconomic drivers of banking variables combined with a principal component analysis. We show how it can be used to make projections, conditional on exogenous paths of macroeconomic variables. We also rely on this approach to identify the balance sheet and income statement factors that are key in explaining bank heterogeneity in response to macroeconomic shocks. We apply our method, using alternative estimation strategies and assumptions, to the 2013 and 2014 stress tests of medium- and large-size U.S. banks mandated by the Dodd-Frank Act, and obtain stress projections for capitalization measures at the bank-by-bank and industry-wide levels. Our results suggest that while capitalization of the U.S. banking industry has improved in recent years, under reasonable assumptions regarding growth in assets and loans, the stress scenarios can imply sizable deterioration in banks' capital positions.
39 citations
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TL;DR: This paper examined the impact of the Senior Citizens Freedom to Work Act of 2000, which abolished the Social Security retirement earnings test for those aged 65-69, on the labor supply of older men using data from the 1996-2004 waves of the Health and Retirement Study (HRS).
Abstract: This paper examines the impact of the Senior Citizens Freedom to Work Act of 2000, which abolished the Social Security retirement earnings test for those aged 65-69, on the labor supply of older men using data from the 1996-2004 waves of the Health and Retirement Study (HRS). Based on reduced-form specifications, we find that the repeal of the earnings test increased labor supply on the intensive margin by 12-17%, the bulk of which was concentrated among men with a high-school degree, whose labor supply rose by 19-26%. We formulate a unique test for endogenous reporting of health status by examining how reported health changes with the repeal of the earnings test. We find some evidence of endogenous self-reported health status. In particular, older men were substantially less likely to have reported that health limits their ability to work after, relative to before the earnings test repeal, with the bulk of the effect concentrated among men with high-school degrees, who had the largest labor-supply response to the repeal.
39 citations
Authors
Showing all 202 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Lutz Kilian | 81 | 251 | 39552 |
Peter Egger | 72 | 457 | 17654 |
Francis E. Warnock | 41 | 125 | 8657 |
Rebel A. Cole | 41 | 149 | 9092 |
Finn E. Kydland | 38 | 123 | 21288 |
Daniel L. Millimet | 38 | 159 | 5196 |
Joseph Tracy | 35 | 90 | 4286 |
Marc P. Giannoni | 33 | 85 | 5131 |
Ping Wang | 33 | 241 | 4263 |
W. Scott Frame | 32 | 85 | 4616 |
Kei-Mu Yi | 30 | 81 | 7481 |
John V. Duca | 29 | 145 | 3535 |
Stephen P. A. Brown | 28 | 118 | 3455 |
Kathy J. Hayes | 27 | 85 | 3075 |
Alexander Chudik | 26 | 103 | 3907 |