Latest on Macroeconomics
CBS Faculty Research on Macroeconomics
A Framework for Financial Accounting Standards: Issues and a Suggested Framework
- Authors
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James Ohlson and Stephen Penman
- Date
- September 1, 2010
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Accounting Horizons
This paper addresses the issues that confront the FASB and IASB in developing a new conceptual framework document. First, we suggest characteristics that a conceptual framework ought to exhibit. Most of these suggestions are based on our critique of the existing framework and the FASB-IASB work in progress. Second, we present a model framework that exhibits these characteristics. We emphasize up front that this framework is quite explicit. It goes to the heart of what a framework document should do: it places specific restrictions on what constitutes admissible accounting standards.
Monetary Policy Flexibility, Risk Management, and Financial Disruptions
- Authors
- Date
- June 1, 2010
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Asian Economics
This paper argues that the monetary policy that is appropriate during an episode of financial market disruption is likely to be quite different than in times of normal market functioning. When financial markets experience a significant disruption, a systematic approach to risk management requires policymakers to be preemptive in responding to the macroeconomic implications of incoming financial market information, and decisive actions may be required to reduce the likelihood of an adverse feedback loop.
Do External Interventions Work? The Case of Trade Reform Conditions in IMF Supported Programs
- Authors
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Shang-Jin Wei and Zhiwi Zhang
- Date
- May 1, 2010
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Development Economics
Trade reform conditions are common in IMF supported programs. Of the 99 countries that had IMF programs during 1993–2003, 77 had trade reform conditions in their programs. Since the WTO has not been found especially effective in promoting trade openness for most developing countries, it is of great interest to see if the IMF has been more effective as it combines carrots and sticks not available to the WTO. Yet, the effectiveness of these trade conditions has not been systematically studied. Using a unique dataset, this paper provides such an assessment.
Political Limits to Globalization
- Authors
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Daron Acemoglu and Pierre Yared
- Date
- May 1, 2010
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- American Economic Review
Despite the major advances in information technology that have shaped the recent wave of globalization, openness to trade is still a political choice, and trade policy can change with shifts in domestic political equilibria. This paper suggests that a particular threat and a limiting factor to globalization and its future developments may be militarist sentiments that appear to be on the rise among many nations around the globe today.
Politicians, Taxes, and Debt
The standard analysis of the efficient management of income taxes and debt assumes a benevolent government and ignores potential distortions arising from rent-seeking politicians. This paper departs from this framework by assuming that a rent-seeking politician chooses policies. If the politician chooses extractive policies, citizens throw him out of power. We analyze the efficient sustainable equilibrium. Unlike in the standard economy, temporary economic shocks generate volatile and persistent changes in taxes along the equilibrium path.
Strategic Communication: Prices versus Quantities
- Authors
- Date
- April 1, 2010
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of the European Economic Association
We examine how cheap talk communication between managers within the same firm depends on the type of decisions that the firm makes. A firm consists of a headquarters and two operating divisions. Headquarters is unbiased but does not know the demand conditions in the divisions’ markets. Each division manager knows the demand conditions in his market but is also biased towards his division. The division managers communicate with headquarters, which then sets either the prices or quantities for each division.
Equilibrium Impact of Demographic Changes on Asset Prices
- Authors
- Date
- March 23, 2010
- Format
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Working Paper
We study a dynamic overlapping generations model where the population growth rate is stochastic, or can experience gradual but persistent changes. This leads to changes in the demographic makeup of the economy across the young, middle aged (who do the principal saving) and the old (who sell their assets to finance consumption).
China's Experience under the Multifiber Arrangement and the Agreement on Textile and Clothing
- Authors
- Date
- March 1, 2010
- Format
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Chapter
- Book
- China's Growing Role in World Trade
This paper analyzes China's experience under U.S. apparel and textile quotas. It makes use of a new database that tracks U.S. trading partners' performance under the quota regimes established by the global Multifiber Arrangement (1974 to 1995) and subsequent Agreement on Textiles and Clothing (1995 to 2005). We find that China was relatively more constrained under these regimes than other countries and that, as quotas were lifted, China's exports grew disproportionately. When the ATC finally ended in 2005, China's exports surged while those from nearly all other regions fell.