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Macroeconomics

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Macroeconomics Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Latest on Macroeconomics

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CBS Faculty Research on Macroeconomics

How Big a Problem is Too Big to Fail?

Authors
Frederic Mishkin
Date
January 1, 2006
Format
Working Paper

This review essay examines whether too-big-to-fail is as serious a problem as Gary Stern and Ron Feldman contend. This essay argues that Stern and Feldman overstate the importance of the too-big-to-fail problem and do not give enough credit to the FDICIA legislation of 1991 for improving bank regulation and supervision. However, this criticism of the Stern and Feldman book does not detract from many of its messages.

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Inflation Targeting: True Progress or Repackaging of an Old Idea?

Authors
Frederic Mishkin
Date
January 1, 2006
Format
Working Paper

In 1990, a new monetary strategy was born, inflation targeting.

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Is Financial Globalization Beneficial?

Authors
Frederic Mishkin
Date
January 1, 2006
Format
Working Paper

This lecture examines whether financial globalization is beneficial to developing countries by first examining the evidence on financial development and economic growth and concludes that financial development is indeed a key element in promoting economic growth. It then asks why if financial development is so beneficial, it often doesn't occur. It then goes on to examine whether globalization, particularly of the financial kind, can help encourage financial and economic development and argues that it can.

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The Next Great Globalization: How Disadvantaged Nations Can Harness Their Financial Systems to Get Rich

Authors
Frederic Mishkin
Date
January 1, 2006
Format
Book
Publisher
Princeton University Press

Many prominent critics regard the international financial system as the dark side of globalization. But in this book, economist Frederic Mishkin argues that financial globalization today is essential for poor nations to become rich. Mishkin argues that an effectively managed financial globalization promises benefits on the scale of the hugely successful trade and information globalizations of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This financial revolution can lift developing nations out of poverty and increase the wealth and stability of emerging and industrialized nations alike.

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Low-Income Countries, Market Access, and Quality Upgrading

Authors
Amit Khandelwal
Date
January 1, 2006
Format
Working Paper
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Fair Trade for All: How Trade Can Promote Development

Authors
Joseph Stiglitz and Andrew Charlton
Date
December 1, 2005
Format
Book
Publisher
Oxford University Press

How can the poorer countries of the world be helped to help themselves through freer, fairer trade? In this challenging and controversial book Nobel prize-winning economist Joseph E. Stiglitz and his co-author Andrew Charlton address one of the key issues facing world leaders today. They put forward a radical and realistic new model for managing trading relationships between the richest and the poorest countries.

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Healthy, Wealthy, and Wise: Five Steps to a Better Health Care System

Authors
John Cogan, R. Glenn Hubbard, and Daniel Kessler
Date
December 1, 2005
Format
Book
Publisher
AEI Press

America's health care system is the envy of the world, but it faces serious challenges. The costs of care are rising rapidly, the number of uninsured Americans is at an all-time high, and public dissatisfaction is steadily increasing. How can we preserve the strengths of our current system while correcting its weaknesses? Three of American's leading health-care scholars answer that question in Healthy, Wealthy, and Wise. Poorly conceived federal tax policies, insurance regulations, and barriers to entry have distorted health-care markets and inhibited competition.

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A Solution to Climate Change in the World's Rainforests

Authors
Geoffrey Heal and Kevin Conrad
Date
November 29, 2005
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
Financial Times

A novel economic model for reducing deforestation is being proposed by the Coalition for Rainforest Nations at the current United Nations climate change conference in Montreal. A new player in the climate change game, the coalition is proposing economic incentives for conserving tropical forests while contributing to climate stability. The coalition's proposal seeks to create new markets while reforming outmoded market and regulatory mechanisms. From the perspective of tropical countries, this change would make conservation a financially viable policy, with real economic returns.

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On Selective Indirect Tax Reform in Developing Countries

Authors
M. Shahe Emran and Joseph Stiglitz
Date
June 1, 2005
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Public Economics

The current consensus on indirect tax reform in developing countries favors a reduction in trade taxes with an increase in VAT to raise revenue. The theoretical results on selective reform that underlie this consensus are, however, derived from partial models that ignore the existence of an informal economy. Once the incomplete coverage of VAT due to an informal economy is acknowledged, we show that, contrary to the current consensus, the standard revenue-neutral selective reform of trade taxes and VAT reduces welfare under plausible conditions.

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Research on Macroeconomics

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