The following is a
list of Federal Reserve Bank of Boston working papers
grouped according to the following subjects:
The working paper's number number (for example, No.
95-11) links to the paper's abstract and full text (if
available).
Banking
No. 04-7 A
General-Equilibrium Asset-Pricing Approach to the
Measurement of Nominal
and Real Bank Output
by J. Christina Wang, Susanto Basu, and John
G. Fernald
No. 03-8 Merger-Related
Cost Savings in the Production of Bank Services
by J. Christina Wang
No. 03-7 Productivity
and Economies of Scale in the Production of Bank Service
Value Added
by J. Christina Wang
No. 03-6 Service
Output of Bank Holding Companies in the 1990s and
the Role of Risk
by J. Christina Wang
No. 03-5 Capital
and Risk: New Evidence on Implications of Large Operational
Losses
by Patrick
de Fontnouvelle, Virginia DeJesus-Rueff, John
Jordan, and Eric
Rosengren
No. 03-4 Loanable
Funds, Risk, and Bank Service Output
by J. Christina Wang
No. 00-4 “Troubled
Banks, Impaired Foreign Direct Investment: The Role
of Relative Access to Credit”
by Michael W. Klein, Joe Peek, and Eric Rosengren
No. 00-3 “Deposit
Insurance, Capital Requirements, and Financial Stability”
by Richard W. Kopcke
No. 99-8 “Does
the Federal Reserve Possess An Exploitable Informational
Advantage?”
by Joe Peek, Eric S. Rosengren, and Geoffrey M. B.
Tootell
No. 99-7 “Is
Bank Supervision Central to Central Banking?”
by Joe Peek, Eric S. Rosengren, and Geoffrey M. B.
Tootell
No. 99-5 “Network
Externalities and Technology Adoption: Lessons from
Electronic Payments”
by Gautam Gowrisankaran and Joanna Stavins
No. 99-1 “The
Impact of Greater Bank Disclosure Amidst a Banking
Crisis”
by John S. Jordan, Joe Peek, and Eric Rosengren
No. 98-9 “Determinants
of the Japan Premium: Actions Speak Louder than Words”
by Joe Peek and Eric S. Rosengren
No. 98-8 “Will
Greater Disclosure and Transparency Prevent the Next
Banking Crisis?”
by Eric S. Rosengren
No. 98-7 “Japanese
Banking Problems: Implications for Southeast Asia”
by Joe Peek and Eric S. Rosengren
No. 98-3 “The
Poor Performance of Foreign Bank Subsidiaries: Were
the Problems Acquired or Created?”
by Joe Peek, Eric S. Rosengren, and Faith Kasirye
No. 98-2 “Does
the Federal Reserve Have an Informational Advantage?
You Can Bank on It”
by Joe Peek, Eric S. Rosengren, and Geoffrey M. B.
Tootell.
No. 97-4 “Managers'
Opportunistic Trading of Their Firms' Shares: A Case
Study of Executives in the Banking Industry”
by John S. Jordan
No. 97-1 “Bank
Consolidation and Small Business Lending: It's Not
Just Bank Size that Matters”
by Joe Peek and Eric S. Rosengren
No. 96-10 “Can Studies of Application Denials
and Mortgage Defaults Uncover Taste-Based Discrimination?”
by Geoffrey M. B. Tootell
No. 96-6 “Redlining
in Boston: Do Mortgage Lenders Discriminate Against
Neighborhoods?”
by Geoffrey M. B. Tootell
No. 96-5 “Will
Legislated Intervention Prevent the Next Banking Crisis?”
by Joe Peek and Eric S. Rosengren
No. 96-3 “Derivatives
Activity at Troubled Banks”
by Joe Peek and Eric S. Rosengren
No. 95-10 “Discrimination,
Redlining, and Private Mortgage Insurance”
by Geoffrey M.B. Tootell
No. 95-5 “Small
Business Credit Availability: How Important Is Size
of Lender?”
by Joe Peek and Eric S. Rosengren
No. 95-2 “Bank
Regulatory Agreements and Real Estate Lending”
by Joe Peek and Eric S. Rosengren
No. 95-1 “Banks
and the Availability of Small Business Loans”
by Joe Peek and Eric S. Rosengren
No. 93-2 “Bank Regulation and the Credit Crunch”
by Joe Peek and Eric Rosengren
No. 92-7 “Mortgage
Lending in Boston: Interpreting HMDA Data”
by Alicia H. Munnell, Lynn E. Browne, James McEneaney,
and Geoffrey M.B. Tootell
No. 92-5 “Failed
Bank Resolution and the Collateral Crunch: The Advantages
of Adopting Transferable Puts”
by Eric S. Rosengren and Katerina Simons
No. 92-4 “The Role
of Real Estate in the New England Credit Crunch”
by Joe Peek and Eric S. Rosengren
No. 91-4 “The Capital Crunch: Neither a Borrower
Nor a Lender Be”
by Joe Peek and Eric Rosengren
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Econometrics
No. 04-2 Estimating
Forward Looking Euler Equations with GMM Estimators:
An Optimal Instruments Approach
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer and Giovanni
P. Olivei
No. 03-8 Merger-Related
Cost Savings in the Production of Bank Services
by J. Christina Wang
No. 03-7 Productivity
and Economies of Scale in the Production of Bank Service
Value Added
by J. Christina Wang
No. 03-6 Service
Output of Bank Holding Companies in the 1990s and
the Role of Risk
by J. Christina Wang
No. 03-5 Capital
and Risk: New Evidence on Implications of Large Operational
Losses
by Patrick
de Fontnouvelle, Virginia DeJesus-Rueff, John
Jordan, and Eric
Rosengren
No. 03-4 Loanable
Funds, Risk, and Bank Service Output
by J. Christina Wang
No. 03-2 On
the Trade Impact of Nominal Exchange Rate Volatility
by Silvana Tenreyro
No. 03-1 Gravity-Defying
Trade
by J.M.C. Santos Silva and Silvana Tenreyro
No. 02-4 Economic
Effects of Currency Unions
by Silvana Tenreyro
and Robert J. Barro
No. 02-3 Estimating
the Euler Equation for Output
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
and Glenn D. Rudebusch
No. 02-2 A Quantile
Regression Analysis of the Cross Section of Stock
Market Returns
by Michelle L. Barnes
and Anthony W. Hughes
No. 02-1 The
Behavior of Chinas Stock Prices in Response
to the Proposal and Approval of Bonus Issues
by Michelle L. Barnes
and Shiguang Ma
No. 01-6 “Optimal
Monetary Policy in a Model with Habit Formation and
Explicit Tax Distortions
”by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
No. 01-5 “Are
Taste and Technology Parameters Stable? A Test of
Deep Parameter Stability in Real Business
Cycle Models of the U.S. Economy”
by Daniel G. Swaine
No. 01-2 “Time
Present and Time Past: A Duration Analysis of IMF
Program Spells”
by Joseph P. Joyce
No. 01-1 “Transition
Dynamics in Vintage Capital Models: Explaining the
Postwar Catch-Up of Germany and Japan
”by Simon Gilchrist and John C. Williams
No. 00-5 “Optimal
Monetary Policy in a Model with Habit Formation”
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
No. 99-9 “Is
the U.S. Economy Characterized by Endogenous Growth?:
A Time-Series Test of Two Stochastic Growth Models”
by Daniel G. Swaine
No. 99-4 “Are
Deep Parameters Stable? The Lucas Critique
as an Empirical Hypothesis”
by Arturo Estrella and Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
No. 98-4 “What
Do Cross-Sectional Growth Regressions Tell Us about
Convergence?”
by Daniel G. Swaine
No. 96-2 “Computationally
Efficient Solution and Maximum Likelihood Estimation
of Nonlinear Rational Expectations Models”
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer and C. Hoyt Bleakley
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Finance
No. 04-8 Incomplete
Markets and Trade
by Paul Willen
No. 04-7 A
General-Equilibrium Asset-Pricing Approach to the
Measurement of Nominal
and Real Bank Output
by J. Christina Wang, Susanto Basu, and John
G. Fernald
No. 04-5 Defaultable
Debt, Interest Rates, and the Current Account
by Mark Aguiar and Gita Gopinath
No. 03-3 Diversification
and Development
by Miklós Koren and Silvana Tenreyro
No. 02-5 Corporate
Dollar Debt and Depreciations: Much Ado About Nothing?
by Hoyt Bleakley and Kevin Cowan
No. 02-2 A Quantile
Regression Analysis of the Cross Section of Stock
Market Returns
by Michelle L. Barnes
and Anthony W. Hughes
No. 02-1 The
Behavior of Chinas Stock Prices in Response
to the Proposal and Approval of Bonus Issues
by Michelle L. Barnes
and Shiguang Ma
No. 00-3 “Deposit
Insurance, Capital Requirements, and Financial Stability”
by Richard W. Kopcke
No. 99-6 “Capital
Account Liberalization, Financial Depth, and Economic
Growth”
by Michael W. Klein and Giovanni Olivei
No. 98-6 “Weekends
Can Be Rough: Revisiting the Weekend Effect in Stock
Prices”
by Peter Fortune
No. 97-5 “Collateral
Damage: Effects of the Japanese Real Estate Collapse
on Credit Availability and Real Activity in the United
States”
by Joe Peek and Eric S. Rosengren
No. 96-4 “The
Maturity Structure of Term Premia with Time-Varying
Expected Returns”
by Mark A. Hooker
No. 96-1 “The
International Transmission of Financial Shocks: The
Case of Japan”
by Joe Peek and Eric S. Rosengren
No. 94-3 “Near
Common Factors and Confidence Regions for Present
Value Models”
by Stephen R. Blough
No. 92-6 “Defaults
of Original Issue High-Yield Bonds”
by Eric S. Rosengren
No. 91-6 “Treasury Bill
Rates in the 1970s and 1980s”
by Patric H. Hendershott and Joe Peek
No. 91-3 “The
Capitalization and Portfolio Risk of Insurance Companies”
by Richard W. Kopcke
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Housing
No. 00-1 “Monetary
Policy, Housing Investment, and Heterogeneous Regional
Markets”
by Michael Fratantoni and Scott Schuh
No. 96-12 “Unifying
Empirical and Theoretical Models of Housing Supply”
by Christopher J. Mayer and C. Tsuriel Somerville
No. 95-11 “Intergenerational
Transfers, Borrowing Constraints, and Saving Behavior:
Evidence from the Housing Market”
by Gary V. Engelhardt and Christopher J. Mayer
No. 95-3 “Housing
Price Dynamics within a Metropolitan Area”
by Karl E. Case and Christopher J. Mayer
No. 94-5 “Gifts, Down Payments, and Housing
Affordability”
by Christopher J. Mayer and Gary Engelhardt
No. 93-6 “Equity and Time to Sale in the Real
Estate Market”
by David Genesove and Christopher J. Mayer
No. 93-5 “Reverse Mortgages and the Liquidity
of Housing Wealth”
by Christopher J. Mayer and Katerina V. Simons
No. 93-3 “A Model of Real Estate Auctions versus
Negotiated Sales”
by Christopher J. Mayer
No. 93-1 “Assessing the Performance of Real
Estate Auctions”
by Christopher J. Mayer
No. 92-7 “Mortgage
Lending in Boston: Interpreting HMDA Data”
by Alicia H. Munnell, Lynn E. Browne, James McEneaney,
and Geoffrey M.B. Tootell
No. 92-4 “The Role
of Real Estate in the New England Credit Crunch”
by Joe Peek and Eric S. Rosengren
No. 91-7 “The Measurement and Determinants of
Single-Family House Prices”
by Joe Peek and James A. Wilcox
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International
No. 04-8 Incomplete Markets and Trade
by Paul Willen
No. 04-5 Defaultable
Debt, Interest Rates, and the Current Account
by Mark Aguiar and Gita Gopinath
No. 04-4 Emerging
Market Business Cycles: The Cycle is the Trend
by Mark Aguiar and Gita Gopinath
No. 04-3 Trade
Liberalization and the Politics of Financial Development
by Matías Braun and Claudio Raddatz
No. 03-3 Diversification
and Development
by Miklós Koren and Silvana Tenreyro
No. 03-2 On
the Trade Impact of Nominal Exchange Rate Volatility
by Silvana Tenreyro
No. 03-1 Gravity-Defying
Trade
by J.M.C. Santos Silva and Silvana Tenreyro
No. 02-8 Job
Creation, Job Destruction, and International Competition:
Job Flows and Trade – The Case of NAFTA
by Michael W. Klein, Scott
Schuh, and Robert
K. Triest
No. 02-7 Job
Creation, Job Destruction, and International Competition:
A Literature Review
by Michael W. Klein, Scott
Schuh, and Robert
K. Triest
No. 02-5 Corporate
Dollar Debt and Depreciations: Much Ado About Nothing?
by Hoyt Bleakley and Kevin Cowan
No. 02-4 Economic
Effects of Currency Unions
by Silvana Tenreyro
and Robert J. Barro
No. 02-1 The
Behavior of Chinas Stock Prices in Response
to the Proposal and Approval of Bonus Issues
by Michelle L. Barnes
and Shiguang Ma
No. 01-2 “Time
Present and Time Past: A Duration Analysis of IMF
Program Spells”
by Joseph P. Joyce
No. 01-1 “Transition
Dynamics in Vintage Capital Models: Explaining the
Postwar Catch-Up of Germany and Japan
”by Simon Gilchrist and John C. Williams
No. 00-4 “Troubled
Banks, Impaired Foreign Direct Investment: The Role
of Relative Access to Credit”
by Michael W. Klein, Joe Peek, and Eric Rosengren
No. 99-11 “Job
Creation, Job Destruction, and the Real Exchange Rate”
by Michael W. Klein, Scott Schuh, and Robert K. Triest
No. 99-6 “Capital
Account Liberalization, Financial Depth, and Economic
Growth”
by Michael W. Klein and Giovanni Olivei
No. 98-9 “Determinants
of the Japan Premium: Actions Speak Louder than Words”
by Joe Peek and Eric S. Rosengren
No. 98-7 “Japanese
Banking Problems: Implications for Southeast Asia”
by Joe Peek and Eric S. Rosengren
No. 98-3 “The
Poor Performance of Foreign Bank Subsidiaries: Were
the Problems Acquired or Created?”
by Joe Peek, Eric S. Rosengren, and Faith Kasirye
No. 97-5 “Collateral
Damage: Effects of the Japanese Real Estate Collapse
on Credit Availability and Real Activity in the United
States”
by Joe Peek and Eric S. Rosengren
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Labor Markets
No. 04-6 Effective
Labor Regulation and Microeconomic Flexibility
by Ricardo Caballero, Kevin N. Cowan, Eduardo M.R.A. Engel, and Alejandro Micco
No. 02-8 Job
Creation, Job Destruction, and International Competition:
Job Flows and Trade – The Case of NAFTA
by Michael W. Klein, Scott
Schuh, and Robert
K. Triest
No. 02-7 Job
Creation, Job Destruction, and International Competition:
A Literature Review
by Michael W. Klein, Scott
Schuh, and Robert
K. Triest
No. 99-11 “Job
Creation, Job Destruction, and the Real Exchange Rate”
by Michael W. Klein, Scott Schuh, and Robert K. Triest
No. 99-10 “Gross
Job Flows and Firms”
by Scott Schuh and Robert K. Triest
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Macroeconomics
No. 04-4 Emerging
Market Business Cycles: The Cycle is the Trend
by Mark Aguiar and Gita Gopinath
No. 04-2 Estimating
Forward Looking Euler Equations with GMM Estimators:
An Optimal Instruments Approach
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer and Giovanni
P. Olivei
No. 04-1 The
Timing of Monetary Policy Shocks
by Giovanni Olivei and Silvana Tenreyro
No. 03-3 Diversification
and Development
by Miklós Koren and Silvana Tenreyro
No. 02-8 Job
Creation, Job Destruction, and International Competition:
Job Flows and Trade – The Case of NAFTA
by Michael W. Klein, Scott
Schuh, and Robert
K. Triest
No. 02-7 Job
Creation, Job Destruction, and International Competition:
A Literature Review
by Michael W. Klein, Scott
Schuh, and Robert
K. Triest
No. 02-3 Estimating
the Euler Equation for Output
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
and Glenn D. Rudebusch
No. 01-6 “Optimal
Monetary Policy in a Model with Habit Formation and
Explicit Tax Distortions
”by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
No. 01-5 “Are
Taste and Technology Parameters Stable? A Test of
Deep Parameter Stability in Real Business
Cycle Models of the U.S. Economy”
by Daniel G. Swaine
No. 01-2 “Time
Present and Time Past: A Duration Analysis of IMF
Program Spells”
by Joseph P. Joyce
No. 01-1 “Transition
Dynamics in Vintage Capital Models: Explaining the
Postwar Catch-Up of Germany and Japan
”by Simon Gilchrist and John C. Williams
No. 00-5“Optimal
Monetary Policy in a Model with Habit Formation”
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
No. 00-3 “Deposit
Insurance, Capital Requirements, and Financial Stability”
by Richard W. Kopcke
No. 00-2 “Identifying
the Macroeconomic Effect of Loan Supply Shocks ”
by Joe Peek, Eric S. Rosengren, and Geoffrey M. B.
Tootell
No. 99-11 “Job
Creation, Job Destruction, and the Real Exchange Rate”
by Michael W. Klein, Scott Schuh, and Robert K. Triest
No. 99-10 “Gross
Job Flows and Firms”
by Scott Schuh and Robert K. Triest
No. 99-9 “Is
the U.S. Economy Characterized by Endogenous Growth?:
A Time-Series Test of Two Stochastic Growth Models”
by Daniel G. Swaine
No. 99-6 “Capital
Account Liberalization, Financial Depth, and Economic
Growth”
by Michael W. Klein and Giovanni Olivei
No. 99-4 “Are
Deep Parameters Stable? The Lucas Critique
as an Empirical Hypothesis”
by Arturo Estrella and Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
No. 99-3 “Fiscal
Retrenchments and the Level of Economic Activity”
by Giovanni Olivei
No. 99-2 “Productivity
Shocks, Investment, and the Real Interest Rate”
by Giovanni Olivei
No. 98-5 “Dynamic
Inconsistencies: Counterfactual Implications of a
Class of Rational Expectations Models”
by Arturo Estrella and Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
No. 98-4 “What
Do Cross-Sectional Growth Regressions Tell Us about
Convergence?”
by Daniel G. Swaine
No. 98-1 “An
Optimizing Model for Monetary Policy Analysis: Can
Habit Formation Help?”
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
No. 97-7 “Input
and Output Inventories”
by Brad R. Humphreys, Louis J. Maccini, and Scott
Schuh
No. 95-12 “A
New Approach to Causality and Economic Growth”
by Steven M. Sheffrin and Robert K. Triest
No. 95-7 “Modeling
Long-Term Nominal Interest Rates”
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
No. 95-6 “The
(Un)Importance of Forward-Looking Behavior in Price
Specifications”
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
No. 95-4 “Tobin's
q, Economic Rents, and the Optimal Stock of Capital”
by Richard W. Kopcke
No. 94-6 “Near Observational Equivalence and
Persistence in GNP”
by Stephen R. Blough
No. 92-3 “Tobin's
q, Economic Rents, and the Optimal Stock of Capital”
by Richard W. Kopcke
No. 92-2 “The Real
Exchange Rate and Foreign Direct Investment in the
United States: Relative Wealth
vs. Relative Wage Effects”
by Michael W. Klein and Eric S. Rosengren
No. 91-8 “Economic Rents, the Demand for Capital,
and Financial Structure”
by Richard W. Kopcke
No. 91-5 “What Is the Impact of Pensions on
Saving? The Need for Good Data”
by Alicia H. Munnell and Frederick O. Yohn
No. 91-2 “Are Pensions Worth the Cost?”
by Alicia H. Munnell
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Microeconomics
No. 04-6 Effective
Labor Regulation and Microeconomic Flexibility
by Ricardo Caballero, Kevin N. Cowan, Eduardo M.R.A. Engel, and Alejandro Micco
No. 03-8 Merger-Related
Cost Savings in the Production of Bank Services
by J. Christina Wang
No. 03-7 Productivity
and Economies of Scale in the Production of Bank Service
Value Added
by J. Christina Wang
No. 02-6 Inventory
Investment and Output Volatility
by Owen Irvine and Scott
Schuh
No. 02-5 Corporate
Dollar Debt and Depreciations: Much Ado About Nothing?
by Hoyt Bleakley and Kevin Cowan
No. 01-5 “Are
Taste and Technology Parameters Stable? A Test of
Deep Parameter Stability in Real Business
Cycle Models of the U.S. Economy”
by Daniel G. Swaine
No. 97-6 “The
Effect of Pricing on Demand and Revenue in Federal
Reserve ACH Payment Processing”
by Joanna Stavins and Paul W. Bauer
No. 96-7 “Price
Discrimination in the Airline Market: The Effect of
Market Concentration”
by Joanna Stavins
No. 95-9 “Estimating
Demand Elasticities in a Differentiated Product Industry:
The Personal Computer Market”
by Joanna Stavins
No. 93-4 “Empirical Evidence on Vertical Foreclosure”
by Eric S. Rosengren and James W. Meehan, Jr.
No. 91-1 “Why State Medicaid Costs Vary: A
First Look”
by Jane Sneddon Little
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Monetary Policy
No. 04-2 Estimating Forward Looking Euler
Equations with GMM Estimators: An Optimal Instruments
Approach
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer and Giovanni
P. Olivei
No. 04-1 The
Timing of Monetary Policy Shocks
by Giovanni Olivei and Silvana Tenreyro
No. 02-3 Estimating
the Euler Equation for Output
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
and Glenn D. Rudebusch
No. 01-6 “Optimal
Monetary Policy in a Model with Habit Formation and
Explicit Tax Distortions”
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
No. 00-5 “Optimal
Monetary Policy in a Model with Habit Formation”
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
No. 00-1 “Monetary
Policy, Housing Investment, and Heterogeneous Regional
Markets”
by Michael Fratantoni and Scott Schuh
No. 99-8 “Does
the Federal Reserve Possess An Exploitable Informational
Advantage?”
by Joe Peek, Eric S. Rosengren, and Geoffrey M. B.
Tootell
No. 99-7 “Is
Bank Supervision Central to Central Banking?”
by Joe Peek, Eric S. Rosengren, and Geoffrey M. B.
Tootell
No. 99-4 “Are
Deep Parameters Stable? The Lucas Critique
as an Empirical Hypothesis”
by Arturo Estrella and Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
No. 98-5 “Dynamic
Inconsistencies: Counterfactual Implications of a
Class of Rational Expectations Models”
by Arturo Estrella and Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
No. 98-2 “Does
the Federal Reserve Have an Informational Advantage?
You Can Bank on It”
by Joe Peek, Eric S. Rosengren, and Geoffrey M. B.
Tootell
No. 98-1 “An
Optimizing Model for Monetary Policy Analysis: Can
Habit Formation Help?”
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
No. 97-3 “Is
Bank Supervision Central to Central Banking?”
“(Working Paper 97-3 has been superseded by
a revised version to be found in Working Paper 99-7.)”
by Joe Peek, Eric S. Rosengren, and Geoffrey M. B.
Tootell
No. 96-11 “Reserve Banks, the Discount Rate
Recommendation, and FOMC Policy”
by Geoffrey M.B. Tootell
No. 96-8 “Towards
a Compact, Empirically Verified Rational Expectations
Model for Monetary Policy Analysis”
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
No. 94-2 “Optimal Monetary Policy in a Model
of Overlapping Price Contracts”
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
No. 94-1 “Monetary Policy When Interest Rates
Are Bounded at Zero”
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer and Brian Madigan
No. 92-1 “Back
to the Future: Monetary Policy and the Twin Deficits”
by Geoffrey M.B. Tootell
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Public Finance
No. 01-6 “Optimal
Monetary Policy in a Model with Habit Formation and
Explicit Tax Distortions
”by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
No. 01-4 “Measuring
the Incentive Effects of State Tax Policies Toward
Capital Investment”
by George A. Plesko and Robert Tannenwald
No. 01-3 “State
User Costs of Capital”
by Charles Ian Mead
No. 97-8 “The
Subsidy from State and Local Tax Deductibility:
Trends,
Methodological Issues, and Its Value After Federal
Tax Reform”
by Robert Tannenwald
No. 97-2 “Property
Tax Limits and Local Fiscal Behavior: Did Massachusetts
Cities and Towns Spend Too Little on Town Services
under Proposition 2½?”
by Katharine L. Bradbury, Christopher J. Mayer, and
Karl E. Case
No. 96-9 “Tax-exempt
Bonds Really Do Subsidize Municipal Capital”
by Peter Fortune
No. 95-8 “Debt
Capacity, Tax-Exemption, and the Municipal Cost of
Capital: A Reassessment of the New View”
by Peter Fortune
No. 94-4 “Estimating Revenues from Tax Reform
in Transition Economies”
by Yolanda K. Kodrzycki
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