Skip to main content
Official Logo of Columbia Business School
Academics
  • Visit Academics
  • Degree Programs
  • Admissions
  • Tuition & Financial Aid
  • Campus Life
  • Career Management
Faculty & Research
  • Visit Faculty & Research
  • Academic Divisions
  • Search the Directory
  • Research
  • Faculty Resources
  • Teaching Excellence
Executive Education
  • Visit Executive Education
  • For Organizations
  • For Individuals
  • Program Finder
  • Online Programs
  • Certificates
About Us
  • Visit About Us
  • CBS Directory
  • Events Calendar
  • Leadership
  • Our History
  • The CBS Experience
  • Newsroom
Alumni
  • Visit Alumni
  • Update Your Information
  • Lifetime Network
  • Alumni Benefits
  • Alumni Career Management
  • Women's Circle
  • Alumni Clubs
Insights
  • Visit Insights
  • Digital Future
  • Climate
  • Business & Society
  • Entrepreneurship
  • 21st Century Finance
  • Magazine
CBS Landing Image
Faculty & Research
  • Academic Divisions
  • Search the Faculty
  • Research
  • Faculty Resources
  • News
  • More 

Macroeconomics

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

Jump to main content

Latest on Macroeconomics

No articles have been found by those filters.

Pagination

  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Current page 7

CBS Faculty Research on Macroeconomics

'Success Taxes,' Entrepreneurial Entry, and Innovation

Authors
R. Glenn Hubbard
Date
January 1, 2005
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Innovation, Policy, and the Economy

Interest in the role of entrepreneurial entry in innovation raises the question of the extent to which tax policy encourages or discourages entry. We find that, while the level of the marginal tax rate has a negative effect in entrepreneurial entry, the progressivity of the tax also discourages entrepreneurship, and significantly so for some groups of households. These effects are principally traceable to the upside' or success' convexity of the household tax schedule.

Read More about 'Success Taxes,' Entrepreneurial Entry, and Innovation

The Impact of New Drug Launches on Longevity: Evidence from Longitudinal, Disease-Level Data from 52 Countries, 1982-2001

Authors
Frank Lichtenberg
Date
January 1, 2005
Format
Journal Article
Journal
International Journal of Health Care Finance and Economics

We perform an econometric analysis of the effect of new drug launches on longevity, using data from the IMS Health Drug Launches database and the WHO Mortality Database.

Read More about The Impact of New Drug Launches on Longevity: Evidence from Longitudinal, Disease-Level Data from 52 Countries, 1982-2001

The Transition from Communism: A Diagrammatic Exposition of Obstacles to the Demand for the Rule of Law

Authors
Karla Hoff and Joseph Stiglitz
Date
January 1, 2005
Format
Working Paper

In earlier work we presented a mathematical exposition of a theory that demonstrated that mass privatization without institutions to limit asset-stripping may not lead to a demand for the rule of law. The present note makes the same argument in terms of simple diagrams. The central idea is that economic actions (to build value or strip assets) and political positions of individuals are interdependent.

Read More about The Transition from Communism: A Diagrammatic Exposition of Obstacles to the Demand for the Rule of Law

Offshoring Tariff Evasion: Evidence from Hong Kong as as Entrepôt Trader

Authors
Peter Moustakerski and Shang-Jin Wei
Date
January 1, 2005
Format
Working Paper

Traditional explanations for high rates of indirect trade have focused on the role of specialized agents in processing and distribution. We provide an alternative explanation based on the differential ability to evade tariffs from some trade entrepôts. Using data on exports to mainland China, we find that the fraction of goods that are routed through Hong Kong (rather than sent directly) is positively correlated with the Chinese tariff rates, both in the cross section and in differences, even though there is no legal tax advantage to sending goods via Hong Kong.

Read More about Offshoring Tariff Evasion: Evidence from Hong Kong as as Entrepôt Trader

Derivatives and the Bankruptcy Code: Why the Special Treatment?

Authors
Franklin Edwards and Edward Morrison
Date
January 1, 2005
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Yale Journal on Regulation

The collapse of Long Term Capital Management ("LTCM") in Fall 1998 and the Federal Reserve Bank's subsequent efforts to orchestrate a bailout raise important questions about the structure of the Bankruptcy Code. The Code contains numerous provisions affording special treatment to financial derivatives contracts, the most important of which exempts these contracts from the "automatic stay" and permits counterparties to terminate derivatives contracts with a debtor in bankruptcy and seize underlying collateral.

Read More about Derivatives and the Bankruptcy Code: Why the Special Treatment?

Derivatives and Systemic Risk: What Role Can the Bankruptcy Code Play?

Authors
Franklin Edwards and Edward Morrison
Date
January 1, 2005
Format
Chapter
Book
Systemic Financial Crises: Resolving Large Bank Insolvencies

In fall 1998 the Federal Reserve Bank ("Fed") arranged a bailout of the massive hedge fund, Long Term Capital Management (LTCM), which faced the prospect of immediate liquidation if it filed a petition under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. The Fed's intervention to aid LTCM calls into question the policy rationale underlying the Bankruptcy COde's special treatment of derivatives. In this paper, we make the following claim: derivatives may deserve special treatment, but not for the reason commonly given.

Read More about Derivatives and Systemic Risk: What Role Can the Bankruptcy Code Play?

The Overselling of Globalization

Authors
Joseph Stiglitz
Date
January 1, 2005
Format
Chapter
Book
Globalization: What's New

Globalization has been sold as bringing unprecedented prosperity to the billions of people who have remained mired in poverty for centuries. Yet, globalization faces enormous resistance especially in the Third World. Why so? I argue that globalization today has been oversold.

Read More about The Overselling of Globalization

Are U.S. Agricultural Subsidies Amber or Green?

Authors
Amit Khandelwal
Date
January 1, 2005
Format
Working Paper

Agricultural subsidies levied by industrial countries have been a source of contentious debate in multilateral trade negotiations. Developing countries argue that subsidies result in an overproduction of crops which depress prices on the world market. The 1996 and 2002 U.S. Farm Bills decoupled agricultural subsidies from current production, so the subsidies should be minimally trade distorting, but a provision in the 2002 Farm Bill that allowed farmers to update their subsidy base potentially broke this decoupling mechanism.

Read More about Are U.S. Agricultural Subsidies Amber or Green?

From Education to Democracy?

Authors
Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson, James Robinson, and Pierre Yared
Date
January 1, 2005
Format
Journal Article
Journal
American Economic Review

The conventional wisdom views high levels of education as a prerequisite for democracy. This paper shows that existing evidence for this view is based on cross-sectional correlations, which disappear once we look at within-country variation. In other words, there is no evidence that countries that increase their education are more likely to become democratic.

Read More about From Education to Democracy?

Pagination

  • First page 1
  • Ellipsis …
  • Page 25
  • Page 26
  • Page 27
  • Page 28
  • Current page 29
  • Page 30
  • Page 31
  • Page 32
  • Page 33
  • Ellipsis …
  • Last page 41

Research on Macroeconomics

External CSS

Homepage Breadcrumb Block

Official Logo of Columbia Business School

Columbia University in the City of New York
665 West 130th Street, New York, NY 10027
Tel. 212-854-1100

Maps and Directions
    • Centers & Programs
    • Current Students
    • Corporate
    • Directory
    • Support Us
    • Recruiters & Partners
    • Faculty & Staff
    • Newsroom
    • Careers
    • Contact Us
    • Accessibility
    • Privacy & Policy Statements
Back to Top Upward arrow
TOP

© Columbia University

  • X
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
Back to top

Accessibility Tools

English French German Italian Spanish Japanese Russian Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) Arabic Bengali