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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

Achieving Scale Collectively

Authors
Vittorio Bassi, Raffaela Muoio, Tommaso Porzio, Ritwika Sen, and Esau Tugume
Date
July 31, 2020
Format
Working Paper

Technology is often embodied in expensive and indivisible capital goods. As a result, the small scale of firms in developing countries could hinder investment and productivity. This paper argues that market interactions between small firms can alleviate this concern. We design and implement a survey of manufacturing firms in Uganda, which uncovers an active rental market for large machines among small firms. We then build an equilibrium model of firm behavior and estimate it with our data.

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Informational Frictions and the Credit Crunch

Authors
Olivier Darmouni
Date
Forthcoming
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
Journal of Finance

In this paper, I estimate the magnitude of an informational friction limiting credit reallocation to firms during the 2007-2009 financial crisis. Because lenders rely on private information when deciding which relationship to end, borrowers looking for a new lender are adversely selected. I show how to separately identify private information from information common to all lenders but unobservable to the econometrician by using bank shocks within a discrete choice model of relationships.

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The Impact of State-Level R&D Tax Credits on the Quantity and Quality of Entrepreneurship

Authors
Cathy Fazio, Jorge Guzman, and Scott Stern
Date
January 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Economic Development Quarterly

The acceleration of start-up activity is often cited as a rationale for the R&D tax credit, a key innovation policy instrument adopted increasingly by US states over the past quarter century. While there is a strong empirical base linking the R&D tax credit to increased R&D expenditures and innovation, prior work has not provided causal evidence that this policy effects the rate of formation and growth potential of new businesses.

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The Return to Protectionism

Authors
Pablo Fajgelbaum, Pinelopi Goldberg, Patrick Kennedy, and Amit Khandelwal
Date
Forthcoming
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
Quarterly Journal of Economics

After decades of supporting free trade, in 2018 the U.S. raised import tariffs and major trade partners retaliated. We analyze the short-run impact of this return to protectionism on the U.S. economy. Import and retaliatory tariffs caused large declines in imports and exports. Prices of imports targeted by tariffs did not fall, implying complete pass-through of tariffs to duty-inclusive prices. The resulting losses to U.S. consumers and firms who buy imports was $51 billion, or 0.27% of GDP. We embed the estimated trade elasticities in a general-equilibrium model of the U.S. economy.

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Declining CO₂ price paths

Authors
Kent Daniel, Robert B. Litterman, and Gernot Wagner
Date
October 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Pricing greenhouse-gas (GHG) emissions involves making tradeoffs between consumption today and unknown damages in the (distant) future. While decision making under risk and uncertainty is the forte of financial economics, important insights from pricing financial assets do not typically inform standard climate–economy models. Here, we introduce EZ-Climate, a simple recursive dynamic asset pricing model that allows for a calibration of the carbon dioxide (CO2) price path based on probabilistic assumptions around climate damages.

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Education, Cognitive Performance, and Investment Fees

Authors
John Beshears, James Choi, David Laibson, Brigitte Madrian, William Skimmyhorn, and Stephen Zeldes
Date
September 24, 2019
Format
Working Paper

We study the association between human capital and rollovers into Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs), using administrative records from the defined contribution savings plan for U.S. government employees: the Thrift Savings Plan (TSP). Employees who separate from government employment have the option to leave balances in the TSP, where fees are currently under 4 basis points. However, we estimate that more than a third of the TSP balances end up being rolled over into IRA accounts, which are very likely to have much higher fees.

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On the Efficiency of Queueing in Dynamic Matching Markets

Authors
Laura Doval and Balázs Szentes
Date
July 18, 2019
Format
Working Paper

This paper considers a two-sided dynamic matching market where agents arrive at the market randomly. An arriving agent is immediately matched if there are agents waiting on the other side. Otherwise, the arriving agent has to decide whether to leave the market and take her outside option or to join a (possibly empty) queue and wait for a match. The equilibrium is characterized by a cutoff, k*, so that an agent joins the queue if, and only if, the length of the queue is less than k*. Our main result compares k* with the socially optimal queue size, K*.

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Time Consistency, Temporal Resolution Indifference and the Separation of Time and Risk

Authors
Felix Kubler, Larry Selden, and Xiao Wei
Date
April 7, 2019
Format
Working Paper

No existing dynamic preference model can simultaneously satisfy time consistency, temporal resolution of risk indifference and the separation of time and risk preferences. In the context of the consumption-portfolio optimization problem, we derive necessary and sufficient conditions such that all three of these properties are satisfied by the dynamic ordinal certainty equivalent (DOCE) preference structure axiomatized in Selden and Stux (1978).

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The Optimal Public and Private Provision of Safe Assets

Authors
Marina Azzimonti and Pierre Yared
Date
April 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Monetary Economics

We develop a theory of optimal government debt in which publicly-issued and privately-issued safe assets are substitutes. While government bonds are backed by future tax revenues, privately-issued safe assets are backed by the future repayment of pools of defaultable private loans. We find that a higher supply of public debt crowds out privately-issued safe assets less than one for one and reduces the interest spread between borrowing and deposit rates.

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Research on Macroeconomics

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