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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

Assessing the Effectiveness of Saving Incentives

Authors
R. Glenn Hubbard and Jonathan Skinner
Date
January 1, 1996
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Economic Perspectives

Examines the effectiveness of incentives to promote household saving in the United States. Individual retirement accounts; 401(k) plans; Cost-benefit approach to saving incentives; Welfare-theoretic approach to saving incentives.

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Precautionary Saving and Social Insurance

Authors
R. Glenn Hubbard, Jonathan Skinner, and Stephen Zeldes
Date
April 1, 1995
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Political Economy

Micro data studies of household saving often find a significant group in the population with virtually no wealth, raising concerns about heterogeneity in motives for saving. In particular, this heterogeneity has been interpreted as evidence against the life cycle model of saving. This paper argues that a life cycle model can replicate observed patterns in household wealth accumulation after accounting explicitly for precautionary saving and asset-based, means-tested social insurance.

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The Tax Sensitivity of Foreign Direct Investment: Evidence from Firm-Level Panel Data

Authors
Jason Cummins and R. Glenn Hubbard
Date
January 1, 1995
Format
Chapter
Book
Effects of Taxation on Multinational Corporations
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Do Tax Reforms Affect Investment?

Authors
Jason Cummins, Kevin Hassett, and R. Glenn Hubbard
Date
January 1, 1995
Format
Chapter
Book
Tax Policy and the Economy

We improve upon existing approaches used to estimate investment models by exploiting tax reforms as "natural experiments." we find that tax policy has an economically important effect through the user cost of capital on firms' equipment investment following major tax reforms enacted in 1962, 1971, 1981, and 1986. This effect is most pronounced for firms not in tax loss positions and, thus, more likely to face statutory tax rates and investment incentives.

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The Importance of Precautionary Motives for Explaining Individual and Aggregate Saving

Authors
R. Glenn Hubbard, Jonathan Skinner, and Stephen Zeldes
Date
June 1, 1994
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy

This paper examines predictions of a life-cycle simulation model—in which individuals face uncertainty regarding their length of life, earnings, and out-of-pocket medical expenditures, and imperfect insurance and lending markets—for individual and aggregate wealth accumulation. Relative to life-cycle or buffer-stock alternatives, our augmented life-cycle model better matches a variety of features of U.S.

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Expanding the Life-Cycle Model: Precautionary Saving and Public Policy

Authors
R. Glenn Hubbard, Jonathan Skinner, and Stephen Zeldes
Date
May 1, 1994
Format
Journal Article
Journal
American Economic Review

In this paper, the author outlines what he believes to be causes of why many people do not save. Much of the research examining levels of consumption, saving, and wealth, as well as their responsiveness to policy, has been done using a life-cycle model with the simplifying assumption of perfect certainty. More recently, a line of inquiry has examined the effects of uncertainty on saving, generally in the context of highly stylized models. This research has shown that, in these models, uninsured earnings uncertainty can alter optimal saving behavior in a variety of important ways.

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A Comparison of Relations Between Security Market Prices, Returns and Accounting Measures in Japan and the United States

Authors
Charles Hall, Yasushi Hamao, and Trevor Harris
Date
February 1, 1994
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of International Financial Management and Accounting

We examine associations between accounting measures of earnings and stock returns in Japan over varying window lengths and compare them to those for the United States. Our results are consistent with the view that Japanese investors utilize less accounting information in their pricing of equities than do their U.S. counterparts. This was particularly evident in the 'boom' period of the mid to late 1980s when the fundamental values conveyed by accounting measures appear to have been largely ignored.

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A Reconsideration of Investment Behavior Using Tax Reforms as Natural Experiments

Authors
Jason Cummins, Kevin Hassett, R. Glenn Hubbard, Robert Hall, and Ricardo Caballero
Date
January 1, 1994
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Brookings Papers on Economic Activity

The article focuses on investment behavior using tax reforms as natural experiments. Economists and policymakers have long been interested in measuring the effects of changes in the returns to and costs of business fixed investment. That interest reflects both theoretical and practical concerns which have stimulated a large body of empirical research using aggregate and micro-level data. This literature has reached few unambiguous conclusions.

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Dynamic Efficiency in the Gifts Economy

Authors
Stephen O'Connell and Stephen Zeldes
Date
June 1, 1993
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Monetary Economics

In the standard analysis of overlapping generations economies with gifts from children to parents, each generation takes the actions of other generations as given. The resulting equilibrium is dynamically inefficient. In reality, however, parents realize that children will respond to higher parental saving by reducing gifts. For a broad class of gift economies, this implicit tax on saving pushes the equilibrium to dynamic efficiency.

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Research on Macroeconomics

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