Content
2006, Issue Nov
2006
- y:2006 Are elite universities losing their competitive edge?
by Adair Morse - y:2006:x:1 Peer effects in the workplace: evidence from professional transitions for the superstars of medicine
by Pierre Azoulay - y:2006:x:2 Geography and innovation: evidence from Nobel Laureate physicists
by Bruce A. Weinberg - y:2006:x:3 Does the location of ideas matter for employment and earnings in the Internet age?
by Richard B. Freeman - y:2006:x:4 Academic entrepreneurs: social learning and participation in university technology transfer
by Maryann P. Feldman - y:2006:x:5 The influence of university research on industrial innovation
by Gerald Marschke - y:2006:x:6 U.S. ethnic scientists and foreign direct investment (FDI) placement patterns
by William R. Kerr - y:2006:x:7 From ideas to innovations: moving technology toward the marketplace through universities and national labs
by Carl F. Kohrt - y:2006:x:8 The role of universities and technology commercialization in economic development
by Donald F. Smith - y:2006:x:9 Research universities: driving America’s new economy
by Lee T. Todd - y:2006:x:10 Inside P&G’s innovation machine
by Jeff D. Davis - y:2006:x:11 A public policy perspective on innovation-driven development strategies: the North Carolina example
by Robert K. McMahan
2005, Issue Nov
- y:2005:i:nov Innovation in education--proceedings of a conference held in Cleveland, Ohio, November 17-18, 2005
by anonymous
2005, Issue Apr
2005
- 1-3 Conference overview and welcoming address
by Sandra Pianalto - 1-4 Education and economic development: beginning a dialogue
by Sandra Pianalto - 5-8 Lessons from private-school vouchers in Columbia
by Eric Bettinger - 5-18 Maximizing returns from prekindergarten education
by W. Steven Barnett - 9-14 Education vouchers and the Cleveland Scholarship Program
by Clive R. Belfield - 15-20 School size and student outcomes: a nontechnical paper
by Christopher Berry & Martin West - 19-45 The public interest in higher education
by Michael J. Rizzo - 21-25 Workforce quality and public-school reform
by Michael H. Moskow - 27-32 Choice, charters, and public-school competition
by Eric A. Hanushek - 33-37 Evaluating HOPE-style merit scholarships
by Christopher Cornwell & David B. Mustard - 39-48 Borrowing constraints on families with young children
by Elizabeth M. Caucutt & Lance Lochner - 47-57 The private and social values of education
by Robert Topel - 49-54 Early childhood development on a large scale
by Rob Grunewald & Arthur J. Rolnick - 55-59 How much does studying matter?
by Ralph Stinebrickner & Todd R. Stinebrickner - 59-72 The economic value of improving local schools
by Eric A. Hanushek - 61-64 Motivation matters: merit scholarships and student achievement
by Michael Kremer - 73-112 Improving public education through strengthened local control
by Roger T. Severino & Robert P. Strauss
2004, Issue Jun
2004
- 433-451 Introduction: Bank concentration and competition: an evolution in the making
by Allen N. Berger & Asli Demirgüč-Kunt & Joseph G. Haubrich & Ross Levine - 453-486 Competition and financial stability
by Franklin Allen & Douglas Gale - 487-509 Crises in competitive versus monopolistic banking systems
by John H. Boyd & Gianni De Nicolo & Bruce Smith - 511-542 How foreign participation and market concentration impact bank spreads: evidence from Latin America
by Ashoka Mody & Maria Soledad Martinez Peria - 543-562 Real effects of bank competition
by Nicola Cetorelli - 563-592 What drives bank competition? Some international evidence
by Stijn Claessens & Luc Laeven - 593-626 Regulations, market structure, institutions, and the cost of financial intermediation
by Asli Demirgüč-Kunt & Luc Laeven & Ross Levine - 627-654 Bank competition and access to finance: international evidence
by Thorsten Beck & Asli Demirgüč-Kunt & Vojislav Maksimovic
2003, Issue Dec
2003
- 1039-1043 Introduction: Recent developments in monetary economics
by David E. Altig - 1045-1084 Adaptive learning and monetary policy design
by George W. Evans & Seppo Honkapohja - 1085-1117 Search, money, and capital: a neoclassical dichotomy
by S. Boragan Aruoba & Randall Wright - 1119-1215 The Great Depression and the Friedman-Schwartz hypothesis
by Lawrence J. Christiano & Roberto Motto & Massimo Rostagno - 1217-1264 Putting \\"M\\" back in monetary policy
by Eric M. Leeper & Jennifer E. Roush - 1265-1317 The output composition puzzle: a difference in the monetary transmission mechanism in the euro area and United States
by Ignazio Angeloni & Anil K. Kashyap & Benoit Mojon & Daniele Terlizzese - 1319-1377 Taking intermediation seriously
by Bruce Smith - 1379-1423 Backward-looking interest-rate rules, interest-rate smoothing, and macroeconomic instability
by Jess Benhabib & Stephanie Schmitt-Grohe & Martin Uribe - 1425-1483 How forward-looking is optimal monetary policy?
by Marc Giannoni & Michael Woodford
2002
- 701-706 Introduction
by Joseph G. Haubrich & James B. Thomson - 707-739 Are larger Treasury issues more liquid? Evidence from bill reopenings
by Michael J. Fleming - 740-766 Supply contraction and trading protocol: an examination of recent changes in the U.S. Treasury market
by Leslie Boni & J. Chris Leach - 767-811 The saga of the first stock index futures contract: benchmarks, models, and learning
by Sam Thomas - 812-847 GSE debt and the decline in the Treasury debt market
by Brent W. Ambrose & Tao-Hsien Dolly King - 848-886 The conduct of monetary policy with a shrinking stock of government debt
by Stacey L. Schreft & Bruce Smith - 887-940 Government asset and liability management in an era of vanishing public debt
by Henning Bohn - 941-945 What should the Federal Reserve do as Treasury debt is repaid?, panel discussion
by Donald L. Kohn - 946-951 Federal Reserve asset acquisition: a proposal, panel discussion
by Alfred Broaddus & Marvin Goodfriend - 952-966 International market implications of declining Treasury debt, panel discussion
by Robert N. McCauley - y:2002 Declining Treasury debt; a conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, October 24-26, 2001
by Joseph G. Haubrich
2001, Issue May
- y:2001:i:may Global monetary integration; a conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, June 1-3, 2000
by Owen F. Humpage
2001
- 303-311 Introduction: context, issues and contributions
by Marco Del Negro & Alejandro Hernandez-Delgado & Owen F. Humpage & Elisabeth Huybens - 312-338 Capital markets and the exchange rate with special reference to the dollarization debate in Latin America
by Guillermo A. Calvo - 339-369 How much bang for the buck? Mexico and dollarization
by Maria Carkovic & Ross Levine - 370-403 The costs of losing monetary independence: the case of Mexico
by Thomas F. Cooley & Vincenzo Quadrini - 404-439 Has monetary policy been so bad that it is better to get rid of it? The case of Mexico
by Marco Del Negro & Francesc Obiols-Homs - 440-481 The benefits of dollarization when stabilization policy lacks credibility and financial markets are imperfect
by Enrique G. Mendoza - 482-517 Stabilization policy and the costs of dollarization
by Stephanie Schmitt-Grohe & Martin Uribe - 518-547 Optimal exchange rate policy: the influence of price setting and asset markets
by Charles Engel - 548-596 Dollarization and the integration of international capital markets; a contribution to the theory of optimal currency areas
by Valerie R. Bencivenga & Elisabeth Huybens & Bruce Smith - 597-625 Fiscal consequences for Mexico of adopting the dollar
by Christopher A. Sims - 626-647 Dollarization and the Mexican labor market
by George J. Borjas & Eric Fisher - 648-668 Optimal central bank areas, financial intermediation, and Mexican dollarization
by Alan C. Stockman
2000, Issue Aug
- y:2000:i:aug What should central banks do?; a conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, Oct. 27-29, 1999
by Joseph G. Haubrich
2000
- 450-473 Financial fragility and Mexico's 1994 peso crisis: an event-window analysis of market-valuation effects
by Gerard Caprio & Anthony Saunders & Berry Wilson - 474-517 Banking crises and bank rescues: the effect of reputation
by Jenny Corbett & Janet Mitchell - 518-579 Deposit insurance and lender-of-last-resort functions
by Christopher Sleet & Bruce Smith - 580-610 Who should act as lender of last resort? an incomplete contracts model
by Rafael Repullo - 611-640 Systemic risk, interbank relations, and liquidity provision by the central bank
by Xavier Freixas & Bruno Parigi & Jean-Charles Rochet - 641-670 Comparing market and supervisory assessments of bank performance: who knows what when?
by Allen N. Berger & Sally M. Davies & Mark J. Flannery - 671-705 Incentives for banking megamergers: what motives might regulators infer from event-study evidence?
by Edward J. Kane
1999, Issue Aug
1999
- 443-468 Inside and outside money as alternative media of exchange
by Ricardo de O. Cavalcanti & Neil Wallace - 469-499 Private money
by Stephen D. Williamson - 500-530 Demandable debt as a means of payment: banknotes versus checks
by Charles M. Kahn & William Roberds - 531-567 Financial fragility with rational and irrational exuberance
by Roger Lagunoff & Stacey L. Schreft - 568-595 Redemption costs and interest rates under the U.S. National Banking System
by Bruce A. Champ & Scott Freeman & Warren E. Weber - 596-623 Can the financial markets privately regulate risk? The development of derivatives clearinghouses and recent over-the-counter innovations
by Randall S. Kroszner - 624-667 Private money creation and the Suffolk Banking System
by Bruce Smith & Warren E. Weber - 668-681 Panel discussion: thoughts on the future of payments and central banking
by Edward J. Green & James J. McAndrews & Arthur J. Rolnick & James B. Thomson
1998, Issue Aug
- 426-471 Moral hazard under commercial and universal banking
by John H. Boyd & Chun Chang & Bruce Smith - 472-499 An international comparison of banks' equity returns
by Kathryn L. Dewenter & Alan C. Hess - 500-523 Intermediation and vertical integration
by Mitchell Berlin & Loretta J. Mester - 524-550 The past and future of commercial banking viewed through an incomplete contract lens
by Raghuram G. Rajan - 551-572 Payment systems with random matching and private information
by Stephen D. Williamson - 573-595 A contracting-theory intepretation of the origins of Federal deposit insurance
by Edward J. Kane & Berry Wilson - 596-620 The legal environment, banks, and long-run economic growth
by Ross Levine - 621-655 Banking in transition economies : does efficiency require instability?
by Gary Gorton & Andrew Winton - y:1998:i:aug Comparative financial systems : a conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, November 5-7, 1997
by Joseph G. Haubrich
1997, Issue Nov
- 568-623 Money in a real business cycle model
by Roger E. A. Farmer - 624-652 Unanticipated money growth and the business cycle reconsidered
by Thomas F. Cooley & Gary D. Hansen - y:1997:i:nov Dynamic effects of monetary policy; a conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, November 6-8, 1996
by David E. Altig & Lawrence J. Christiano & Martin S. Eichenbaum
1997
- 653-686 Inflation forecasts and monetary policy
by Ben S. Bernanke & Michael Woodford - 687-724 The optimum quantity of money: theory and evidence
by Jonas D. M. Fisher & Frederic S. Mishkin & Casey B. Mulligan & Xavier X. Sala-i-Martin - 725-758 On the fit of a neoclassical monetary model in high inflation: Israel 1972-1990
by Benjamin Bental & Zvi Eckstein - 759-782 Stopping inflations, big and small
by Peter N. Ireland - 783-814 Short-run independence of monetary policy under pegged exchange rates and effects of money on exchange rates and interest rates
by Lee E. Ohanian & Alan C. Stockman
1996, Issue Aug
- 426-451 The behavior of interest rates implied by the term structure of Eurodollar future
by Narasimhan Jegadeesh & George Pennacchi - 452-481 Empirical tests of two state-variable Heath-Jarrow models
by Robert R. Bliss & Peter Richken - 482-501 Alligators in the swamp: the impact of derivatives on the financial performance of depository institutions
by Elijah Brewer & William E. Jackson & James T. Moser - 502-526 Diffusion of financial innovations: the case of junk bonds and note issuance facilities
by Philip Molyneux & Nidal Shamroukh - 527-547 The economic effects of client losses on OTC bank derivative dealers: evidence from the capital market
by Jeffrey A. Clark & Steven B. Perfect
1996
1994, Issue Aug
- y:1994:i:aug Federal credit allocation: theory, evidence, and history; a conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, October 17-19, 1993
by Joseph G. Haubrich & James B. Thomson
1994
- 517-522 Introduction
by Joseph G. Haubrich & James B. Thomson - 523-551 Do informational frictions justify federal credit programs?
by Stephen D. Williamson - 552-571 An end to private banking: early New Deal proposals to alter the role of the federal government in credit allocation
by Ronnie J. Phillips - 572-584 Why we need an \\"accord\\" for Federal Reserve credit policy: a note
by Marvin Goodfriend - 585-633 Did risk-based capital allocate bank credit and cause a "credit crunch" in the United States?
by Allen N. Berger & Gregory F. Udell - 634-678 Housing-finance intervention and private incentives: helping minorities and the poor
by Charles W. Calomiris & Charles M. Kahn & Stanley D. Longhofer - 679-709 A \\"barter\\" theory of bank regulation and credit allocation
by Jess C. Beltz & Anjan V. Thakor - 710-734 Public policies and private pension contributions
by William G. Gale - 735-756 The value of Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation insurance
by Christopher M. Lewis & George Pennacchi - 1209-1240 The effects of real and monetary shocks in a business cycle model with some sticky prices
by Lutz Kilian & Lee E. Ohanian & Alan C. Stockman - 1241-1289 The quantitative analysis of the basic neomonetarist model
by Miles S. Kimball & Michael Woodford - 1290-1320 Financial intermediation and monetary policy in a general equilibrium banking model
by Pamela Labadie - 1321-1353 Monetary and financial interaction in the business cycle
by Timothy S. Fuerst - 1354-1401 Inside money, outside money and short-term interest rates
by V. V. Chari & Lawrence J. Christiano & Martin S. Eichenbaum - 1402-1440 Estimating policy-invariant deep parameters in the financial sector when risk and growth matter
by William A. Barnett & Milka Kirova & Meenakshi Pasupathy - 1441-1471 Liquidity effects and transactions technologies
by Michael Dotsey & Peter N. Ireland - 1472-1505 Computable general equilibrium models and monetary policy advice
by David E. Altig & Charles T. Carlstrom & Kevin J. Lansing - y:1994 Liquidity, monetary policy and financial intermediation : a conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, September 29-30, 1994
by David E. Altig
1993, Issue Aug
- y:1993:i:aug Inflation uncertainty; a conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, Nov. 4-6, 1992
by William T. Gavin
1993
- 469-474 Introduction
by William T. Gavin - 475-520 Inflation regimes and the sources of inflation uncertainty
by Martin Evans & Paul Wachtel - 521-557 Inflation uncertainty, relative price uncertainty, and investment in U.S. manufacturing
by John Huizinga - 558-584 Search, bargaining, money and prices: recent results and policy implications
by Alberto Trejos & Randall Wright - 585-611 Contracting costs, inflation, and relative price variability
by Patricia Reagan & Rene M. Stulz - 612-635 The welfare gain from the introduction of indexed bonds
by Alan D. Viard - 636-680 An equilibrium model of nominal bond prices with inflation-output correlation and stochastic volatility
by Jacob Boudoukh - 681-708 Long-memory inflation uncertainty: evidence from the term structure of interest rates
by David K. Backus & Stanley E. Zin - y:1993 Charting a course under free trade (summary of NAFTA conference)
by anonymous - y:1993:x:1 Government risk-bearing: proceedings of a conference held at the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, May 1991
by Mark S. Sniderman
1991, Issue Aug
- y:1991:i:aug Price stability; a conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, November 8-10, 1991
by William T. Gavin
1991
- 1-19 Institutional control and large-scale, long-term hazards
by Al H. Ringleb & Steven N. Wiggins - 21-44 Ambiguity and government risk-bearing for low-probability events
by Howard Kunreuther - 45-70 Public insurance of private risks: theory and evidence from agriculture
by Brian D. Wright - 71-107 Government risk-bearing in the financial sector of a capitalist economy
by Mark J. Flannery - 109-130 Perspectives on the role of government risk-bearing
by Joseph E. Stiglitz - 131-144 Government risk-bearing: what works and what doesn't
by Dennis R. Connolly - 145-166 The PBGC: a costly lesson in the economics of federal insurance
by Kathleen P. Utgoff - 167-176 Recent federal efforts to measure and control government risk-bearing
by Marvin Phaup - 177-182 Information and incentives to improve government risk-bearing
by Justine Farr Rodriguez - 433-438 Introduction
by William T. Gavin - 439-461 The genesis of inflation and the costs of disinflation
by Laurence Ball - 462-482 Seigniorage as a tax: a quantitative evaluation
by Ayse Imrohoroglu & Edward C. Prescott - 483-518 The welfare costs of moderate inflations
by Thomas F. Cooley & Gary D. Hansen - 519-546 Optimal fiscal and monetary policy: some recent results
by V. V. Chari & Lawrence J. Christiano & Patrick J. Kehoe - 547-579 Inflation, personal taxes, and real output: a dynamic analysis
by David E. Altig & Charles T. Carlstrom - 580-612 The sustainability of budget deficits with lump-sum and with income-based taxation
by Henning Bohn - 613-618 Panel discussion: price stability ; The goal of price stability: the debate in Canada
by Charles Freedman - 619-624 Panel discussion: price stability ; An error-correction mechanism for long-run price stability
by J. Huston McCulloch - 625-631 Panel discussion: price stability ; How should long-term monetary policy be determined?
by Lawrence H. Summers - y:1991 Structural changes in U.S. labor markets: causes and consequences: proceedings of a conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, October 1989
by Randall W. Eberts & Erica L. Groshen
1990
- 165-204 The long-run behavior of velocity: the institutional approach revisited: introduction
by Michael D. Bordo & Lars Jonung - 205-263 Developments in monetary aggregation theory
by William A. Barnett - 265-287 Empirical predications of the new monetary economics: perspectives on velocity
by Tyler Cowen & Randall S. Kroszner - 289-324 Money demand, expectations, and the forward-looking model
by Keith Cuthbertson & Mark P. Taylor - 325-348 Buffer stock models of the demand for money and the conduct of monetary policy
by Michael R. Darby & James R. Lothian & Michael Tindall - 349-385 Buffer stocks, credit, and aggregation effects in the demand for broad money: theory and an application to the U.K. personal sector
by James Davidson & Jonathan Ireland - 387-431 The demand for money and the monetary policy process
by Francesco Caramazza & Doug Hostland & Stephen Poloz - 433-467 Modeling money demand in large industrial countries: buffer stock and error correction approaches
by James M. Boughton & George S. Tavlas - y:1990 Economic restructuring of the American Midwest: proceedings of the Midwest Economic Restructuring Conference of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland : 1988
by Richard D. Bingham & Randall W. Eberts - y:1990:x:1 Understanding velocity: new approaches and their policy relevance: special issue. Conference held on September 25-26, 1989
by David Laidler
1989
- 13-43 International trade and money wage growth in the 1980s
by Susan Vroman & Wayne Vroman - 45-65 Lump-sum payments and wage moderation in the union sector
by Linda A. Bell & David Neumark - 67-103 Profit sharing in the 1980s: disguised wages or a fundamentally different form of compensation?
by Douglas Kruse - 105-143 The decline of fringe-benefit coverage in the 1980s
by Douglas R. Bettinger & Stephen A. Woodbury - 145-176 Indexation and contract length in unionized U.S. manufacturing
by Mark Bils - 177-200 Gender differences in cyclical unemployment
by Sanders Korenman & Barbara Okun - 201-213 Macroeconomic implications
by Olivier Jean Blanchard & Finn E. Kydland - y:1989 Perspectives on banking regulation, a conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, November 3-4, 1988
by Randall W. Eberts & George G. Kaufman - y:1989:x:1 Structural changes in U.S. labor markets: causes and consequences : proceedings of a conference held October 1989
by Randall W. Eberts & Erica L. Groshen
1988
- 153-170 Variations on a theme: long-term growth of government
by Jonathan Hughes - 171-188 Long-term trends in bank regulation
by Carter H. Golembe - 189-211 The role of technological and market structure in regulatory reform
by Ronald R. Braeutigam - 213-229 Party realignments and the growth of federal economic regulation, 1861-1986
by Kathleen A. Kemp - 231-264 Thrift deregulation and federal deposit insurance
by James R. Barth & Michael G. Bradley - 265-279 Changing incentives facing financial-services regulators
by Edward J. Kane - 436-458 Recent developments in macroeconomics: a very quick refresher course
by N. Gregory Mankiw - 459-478 Postwar developments in business cycle theory: a moderately classical perspective
by Bennett T. McCallum - 479-506 What microeconomics teaches us about the dynamic macro effects of fiscal policy
by Laurence J. Kotlikoff - 507-530 Some recent developments in labor economics and their implications for macroeconomics
by Lawrence F. Katz - 531-558 On the roles of international financial markets and their relevance for economic policy
by Alan C. Stockman - 559-596 Financial structure and aggregate economic activity: an overview
by Mark Gertler - y:1988 Recent developments in macroeconomics: a very quick refresher course: a conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, October 29-31, 1987
by anonymous