Macroeconomics Department Publications

clear
0 filter(s) selected
close
Go to page
remove add
  • Externe Working Papers

    From the Cliff to the Top: The Path to a Resilient and Sustainable Europe: In-Depth Analysis

    The European Union has put in place an extraordinary array of policy measures to mitigate the devastating economic consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic. The sheer amount and extent of the support economic lifelines makes a rushed termination of policies potentially subject to dire cliff effects. Avoiding these cliff effects requires a combination of decisive and long-lasting fiscal stimuli with an ...

    Bruxelles: European Parliament, 2021, 23 S.
    (Monetary Dialogue Papers ; March 2021)
    | Jan Phillip Fritsche, Anna Gibert, Chi Hyun Kim
  • Externe Working Papers

    Long-Term Effects of Equal Sharing: Evidence from Inheritance Rules for Land

    What are the long-term economic effects of a more equal distribution of wealth? We exploit variation in historical inheritance rules for land traversing political, linguistic, geological, and religious borders in Germany. In some German areas, inherited land was to be shared or divided equally among children, while in others land was ruled to be indivisible. Using a geographic regression discontinuity ...

    Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2020, 55 S.
    (NBER Working Paper Series ; 28230)
    | Charlotte Bartels, Simon Jäger, Natalie Obergruber
  • Externe Working Papers

    Interactions between Bank Levies and Corporate Taxes: How Is Bank Leverage Affected?

    Frankfurt a.M.: Deutsche Bundesbank, 2020, 44 S.
    (Discussion Paper / Deutsche Bundesbank ; 43)
    | Franziska Bremus, Kirsten Schmidt, Lena Tonzer
  • Externe Working Papers

    The ECB’s Communication Strategy: Limits and Challenges after the Financial Crisis: In-Depth Analysis

    Given its central role in public accountability and in the formation of expectations, it is important to reflect on ways to improve the ECB’s communication policy. Communication should not generally strive for maximum transparency. The optimum degree of transparency varies between different aspects of monetary policy and banking supervision. Although the ECB already communicates very openly with the ...

    Bruxelles: European Parliament, 2020, 30 S.
    (Monetary Dialogue Papers ; February 2020)
    | Kerstin Bernoth, Geraldine Dany-Knedlik
  • Externe Working Papers

    How Effective Are Bank Levies in Reducing Leverage Given the Debt Bias of Corporate Income Taxation?

    To finance resolution funds, the regulatory toolkit has been expanded in many countries by bank levies. In addition, these levies are often designed to reduce incentives for banks to rely excessively on wholesale funding resulting in high leverage ratios. At the same time, corporate income taxation biases banks’ capital structure towards debt financing in light of the deductibility of interest on debt. ...

    Vienna: SUERF, 2020, 6 S.
    (SUERF Policy Briefs ; 21/2020)
    | Franziska Bremus, Kirsten Schmidt, Lena Tonzer
  • Externe Working Papers

    Government Spending Multipliers in (Un)certain Times

    We estimate the dynamic effects of government spending shocks, using time-varying volatility in US data modeled through a Markov switching process. We find that the average government spending multiplier is significantly and persistently above one, driven by a crowding-in of private consumption and non-residential investment. We rationalize the results empirically through a contemporaneously countercyclical ...

    Berlin: DIW Berlin, 2019, 27 S. | Jan Philipp Fritsche, Mathias Klein, Malte Rieth
  • Externe Working Papers

    The Role of Labor Market Frictions in Structural Transformation

    Against what theory predicts, large productivity gaps across sectors persist and the process of structural transformation is stagnant in many developing economies. This wedge between observed and optimal labor allocations suggests the presence of institutional and market frictions, which impose costs on the reallocation of labor from low to high productivity sectors, thus leading to sub-optimal allocations ...

    Paris: OECD, 2019, 20 S.: Anh.
    (Working Paper Series / Economic Research Forum ; 1282)
    | Khalid ElFayoumi, Gregory Auclair
  • Externe Working Papers

    Happy Birthday? The Euro at 20: Monetary Dialogue January 2019

    We analyse the first twenty years of the euro both from an economic and an institutional perspective. We find that in particular during the period since the financial crisis, convergence as measured by a variety of indicators has not improved. Design flaws in the Eurozone institutional architecture have contributed importantly to this lack of convergence. This is why further reforms are urgently needed. ...

    Bruxelles: European Parliament, 2019, 30 S.
    (In-depth Analysis)
    | Kerstin Bernoth, Franziska Bremus, Geraldine Dany-Knedlik, Henrik Enderlein, Marcel Fratzscher, Lukas Guttenberg, Alexander Kriwoluzky, Rosa Lastra
  • Externe Working Papers

    Interactions between Bank Levies and Corporate Taxes: How Is the Bank Leverage Affected?

    Regulatory bank levies set incentives for banks to reduce leverage. At the same time, corporate income taxation makes funding through debt more attractive. In this paper, we explore how regulatory levies affect bank capital structure, depending on corporate income taxation. Based on bank balance sheet data from 2006 to 2014 for a panel of EU-banks, our analysis yields three main results: The introduction ...

    Frankfurt a.M.: ESRB, 2019, 36 S.
    (Working Paper Series ; 103)
    | Franziska Bremus, Kirsten Schmidt, Lena Tonzer
  • Externe Working Papers

    Public or Private? The Future of Money: In-Depth Analysis

    Stablecoins issued by large tech companies pose a significant challenge for traditional fiat money. In this study, we highlight the importance of a public-private-cooperation in dealing with this topic, where central banks closely work with stablecoin issuers in issuing synthetic central bank digital currency (sCBDC). This framework minimizes the risks of private money and utilises the technological ...

    Bruxelles: European Parliament, 2019, 23 S.
    (Monetary Dialogue Papers)
    | Chi Hyun Kim, Alexander Kriwoluzky
keyboard_arrow_up