Institution
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Other•St Louis, Missouri, United States•
About: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis is a other organization based out in St Louis, Missouri, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Monetary policy & Inflation. The organization has 203 authors who have published 1650 publications receiving 46084 citations.
Topics: Monetary policy, Inflation, Interest rate, Business cycle, Debt
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The authors showed that the substantial cuts in defense spending proposed by the Bush Administration in 1991 are likely to reduce GNP in both the short run and the long run, even if proceeds from the spending cuts are used to reduce the federal debt.
Abstract: Forecasts from a vector autoregressive model indicate that the substantial cuts in defense spending proposed by the Bush Administration in 1991 are likely to reduce GNP in both the short run and the long run. These forecasts hold even if proceeds from the spending cuts are used to reduce the federal debt. The long-range VAR forecasts, in particular, contrast markedly with those of the large-scale econometric models employed by the Congressional Budget Office.
8 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors study the Taylor rule in the context of dynamic economies and find that in the altered environment, a rule that incorporates leading indicators about regimes significantly outperforms the Taylor policy.
Abstract: The US economy appears to have experienced a pronounced shift toward higher productivity over the last five years or so We wish to understand the implications of such shifts for the structure of optimal monetary policy rules in simple dynamic economies Accordingly, we begin with a standard economy in which a version of the Taylor rule constitutes the optimal monetary policy for a given inflation target and a given level of productivity, and calculate the optimal monetary policy rule in the altered environment We find that in the altered environment, a rule that incorporates leading indicators about regimes significantly outperforms the Taylor rule We use this result to comment on the "new economy" events of the 1990s and the "stagflation" events of the 1970s from the perspective of our model
8 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the impact of the education funding component of the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (the Recovery Act) on public school districts was analyzed using cross- Sectional differences in district-level Recovery Act funding.
Abstract: This paper analyzes the impact of the education funding component of the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (the Recovery Act) on public school districts. We use cross- Sectional differences in district-level Recovery Act funding to investigate the program's impact on staffing, expenditures and debt accumulation. To achieve identification, we use exogenous variation across districts in the allocations of Recovery Act funds for special needs students. We estimate that $1 million of grants to a district had the following effects: expenditures increased by $570 thousand, district employment saw little or no change, and an additional $370 thousand in debt was accumulated. Moreover, 70% of the increase in expenditures came in the form of capital outlays. Next, we build a dynamic, decision theoretic model of a school district's budgeting problem, which we calibrate to district level expenditure and staffing data. The model can qualitatively match the employment and capital expenditure responses from our regressions. We also use the model to conduct policy experiments.
8 citations
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TL;DR: This article examined the reliability of survey data on business incomes, valuations, and rates of return, which are key inputs for studies of wealth inequality and entrepreneurial choice, and found that they are reliable.
Abstract: This paper examines the reliability of survey data on business incomes, valuations, and rates of return, which are key inputs for studies of wealth inequality and entrepreneurial choice.
8 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that imperfect competition can be a rich source of sunspots equilibria and coordination failures, and provide a justification for exogenous variations over time in desired markups, which play an important role as a source of cost-push shocks in monetary policy literature.
Abstract: This paper shows that imperfect competition can be a rich source of sunspots equilibria and coordination failures. This is demonstrated in a dynamic general equilibrium model that has no major distortions except imperfect competition. In the absence of fundamental shocks, the model has a unique certainty (fundamental) equilibrium. But there is also a continuum of stochastic (sunspots) equilibria that are not mere randomizations over fundamental equilibria. Markup is always counter-cyclical in sunspots equilibria, which is consistent with empirical evidence. The paper provides a justification for exogenous variations over time in desired markups, which play an important role as a source of cost-push shocks in the monetary policy literature. We show that fluctuations driven by self-fulfilling expectations (or sunspots) look very similar to fluctuations driven by technology shocks, and we prove that such fluctuations are welfare reducing.
8 citations
Authors
Showing all 214 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
William Easterly | 93 | 253 | 49657 |
David K. Levine | 66 | 358 | 22455 |
Lucio Sarno | 65 | 218 | 17418 |
Paul W. Wilson | 53 | 147 | 18562 |
Christopher J. Neely | 47 | 201 | 8438 |
Edward Nelson | 46 | 143 | 7819 |
David C. Wheelock | 40 | 173 | 6125 |
Michele Boldrin | 40 | 154 | 8365 |
Massimo Guidolin | 36 | 230 | 5640 |
Daniel L. Thornton | 36 | 230 | 5064 |
Jeremy M. Piger | 34 | 98 | 5997 |
Howard J. Wall | 34 | 136 | 4488 |
Michael T. Owyang | 34 | 204 | 3890 |
Christopher Otrok | 34 | 98 | 7601 |
Ping Wang | 33 | 241 | 4263 |