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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: In this paper, the authors extend the current immigration enforcement literature by incorporating both the practice of people smuggling and a role for non-wage income into a two-country, dynamic general equilibrium model.
Abstract: We extend the current immigration-enforcement literature by incorporating both the practice of people smuggling and a role for non-wage income into a two-country, dynamic general equilibrium model. We use the model economy to examine three questions. First, how does technological progress in the smuggling industry affect the level of migration and capital accumulation for a given level of enforcement? Second, do changes in border enforcement affect the level of migration, capital accumulation, and smuggling activity? Third, is the optimal level of enforcement sensitive to technological progress in the smuggling industry? We show that the government chooses to devote resources to border enforcement only if the deterrent effect on smugglers is large enough. Otherwise, it is not worth taxing host-country natives as the taxes paid will more than offset any income gain resulting from fewer migrants.

12 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors constructs a model where this discrepancy is due to frictions in distribution, where imports need to be combined with a local non-traded input, distribution capital, which is slow to adjust.
Abstract: International business-cycle models assume that home and foreign goods are poor substitutes. International trade models assume they are close substitutes. This paper constructs a model where this discrepancy is due to frictions in distribution. Imports need to be combined with a local non-traded input, distribution capital, which is slow to adjust. As a result, imported and domestic goods appear as poor substitutes in the short run. In the long run this non-traded input can be reallocated, and quantities can shift following a change in relative prices. Thus the observed substitutability between home and foreign goods gets larger as time passes.

12 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article conducted a real-time analysis of the evolution of the U.S. business cycles and found that cyclical movements in the US economy affect other economies with a lag, rather than contemporaneously.

12 citations

ReportDOI
TL;DR: It is commonly believed that the response of the price of corn ethanol to shifts in biofuel policies operates in part through market expectations and shifts in storage demand, yet to date it has proved difficult to measure these expectations and to empirically evaluate this view as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: It is commonly believed that the response of the price of corn ethanol (and hence of the price of corn) to shifts in biofuel policies operates in part through market expectations and shifts in storage demand, yet to date it has proved difficult to measure these expectations and to empirically evaluate this view.

12 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors extend the current immigration enforcement literature by incorporating both the practice of people smuggling and a role for non-wage income into a two-country, dynamic general equilibrium model.
Abstract: Illegal immigration and border enforcement in the United States have increased concomitantly for over thirty years. One interpretation is that U.S. border policies have been ineffective. We offer an alternative view, extending the current immigration-enforcement literature by incorporating both the practice of people smuggling and a role for non-wage income into a two-country, dynamic general equilibrium model. We state conditions under which two steady state equilibria exist: one with a low level of capital and high amount of illegal immigration and the other with a high level of capital, but relatively little migration. We then analyze two shocks: a positive technology shock to smuggling services and an increase in border enforcement. In the low-capital steady state, the capital-labor ratio declines with technological progress in smuggling, while illegal immigration increases. In the high-capital steady state, a technology shock causes the capital-labor ratio to rise while the effect on migration is indeterminate. We show that an increase in border enforcement is qualitatively equivalent to a negative technology shock to smuggling. Finally we show that a developed country would never choose small levels of border enforcement over an open border. Moreover, a high level of border enforcement is optimal only if it significantly decreases capital accumulation. In addition, we provide conditions under which an increase in smuggler technology will lead to a decline in the optimal level of enforcement.

12 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