Macroeconomics Department Publications

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  • Externe Working Papers

    When Is Foreign Exchange Intervention Effective? Evidence from 33 Countries

    This paper examines foreign exchange intervention based on novel daily data covering 33 countries from 1995 to 2011. We find that intervention is widely used and an effective policy tool, with a success rate in excess of 80 percent under somecriteria. The policy works well in terms of smoothing the path of exchange rates, and in stabilizing the exchange rate in countries with narrow band regimes. Moving ...

    London: CEPR, 2017, 64 S.
    (Discussion Paper Series / Centre for Economic Policy Research ; 12510)
    | Marcel Fratzscher, Oliver Gloede, Lukas Menkhoff, Lucio Sarno,Tobias Stöhr
  • Externe Working Papers

    Don't Stop Me Now: The Impact of Credit Market Fragmentation on Firms' Financing Constraints

    This paper investigates how the withdrawal of banks from their cross-border business impacted the borrowing costs of European firms since the crisis. We combine aggregate information on total and cross-border credit with firm-level survey data for the period 2010-2014. We find that the decline in cross-border lending led to a deterioration in the borrowing conditions of small firms. In countries with ...

    London: Systemic Risk Centre, 2017, 40 S.
    (SRC Discussion Paper ; 67)
    | Franziska Bremus, Katja Neugebauer
  • Externe Working Papers

    Determining Minimum Wages in China: Do Economic Factors Dominate?

    Minimum wages may be an important instrument to reduce income inequality in a society and to promote socially inclusive economic growth. While higher minimum wages can support the Chinese transformation towards consumption driven growth, they can worsen the price competitiveness in export markets. As they differ throughout the country, this paper investigates their determinants at the regional level. ...

    Bonn: IZA, 2016, 19 S.
    (Discussion Paper Series / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit ; 9716)
    | Christian Dreger, Reinhold Kosfeld, Yanqun Zhang
  • Externe Working Papers

    The End of Cheap Labour: Are Foreign Investors Leaving China?

    China's government is promoting the shift towards a consumption-based economy since a few years. The explicit goal to significantly raise the percentage of wages in the national household income is integral part of the 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-15). The changes in the economic strategy are likely to affect the attractiveness of the country to foreign investors. In this paper, we raise the hypothesis ...

    Bonn: IZA, 2016, 19 S.
    (Discussion Paper Series / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit ; 10097)
    | Julian Donaubauer, Christian Dreger
  • Externe Working Papers

    Local and Spatial Cointegration in the Wage Curve: A Spatial Panel Analysis for German Regions

    The wage curve introduced by Blanchflower and Oswald (1990, 1994) postulates a negative correlation between wages and unemployment. Empirical results focus on particular theoretical channels establishing the relationship. Panel models mostly draw on unionized bargaining or the efficiency wage hypothesis. Spatial econometric approaches can be rationalized by monopsonistic competition. However, the approaches ...

    Bonn: IZA, 2015, 28 S.
    (Discussion Paper Series / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit ; 9577)
    | Reinhold Kosfeld, Christian Dreger
  • Externe Working Papers

    Capital Flow Management Measures: What Are They Good For?

    Are capital controls and macroprudential measures related to international exposures successful in achieving their objectives? Assessing their effectiveness is complicated by selection bias; countries which change their capital-flow management measures (CFMs) often share specific characteristics and are responding to changes in variables that the CFMs are intended to influence. This paper addresses ...

    Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2015, 55 S.
    (NBER Working Paper Series ; 20860)
    | Kristin Forbes, Marcel Fratzscher, Roland Straub
  • Externe Working Papers

    Monetary Policy, Bank Bailouts and the Sovereign-Bank Risk Nexus in the Euro Area

    The paper analyses the empirical relationship between bank risk and sovereign credit risk in the euro area. Using structural VAR with daily financial markets data for 2003-13, the analysis confirms two-way causality between shocks to sovereign risk and bank risk, with the former being overall more important in explaining bank risk, than vice versa. The paper focuses specifically on the impact of non-standard ...

    London: CEPR, 2015, 49 S.
    (Discussion Paper Series / Centre for Economic Policy Research ; 10370)
    | Marcel Fratzscher, Malte Rieth
  • Externe Working Papers

    Innovation Capabilities and Financing Constraints of Family Firms

    Using the 2007 Mannheim innovation survey, we investigate whether family firms are more financially constrained than other firms and how this affects both innovation input as well as innovation outcomes such as market and firm novelties or process innovations. Based on the CDM framework, estimation of the recursive system of equations shows that family businesses are more likely to be constrained and ...

    Jönköping: CESIS, 2015, 37 S.
    (CESIS Electronic Working Paper Series ; 425)
    | Dorothea Schäfer, Andreas Stephan, Jenniffer Solórzano Mosquera
  • Externe Working Papers

    Spillovers of U.S. Unconventional Monetary Policy to Emerging Markets: The Role of Capital Flows

    A growing literature stresses the importance of the "global financial cycle", a common global movement in asset prices and credit conditions, for emerging market economies (EMEs). It is argued that one of the key drivers of this global cycle is monetary policy in the U.S., which is transmitted through international capital flows. In this paper, we add to this discussion and investigate empirically ...

    Berlin: Freie Univ. Berlin, FB Wirtschaftswiss., 2015, 34 S.
    (Discussion Paper / School of Business & Economics ; 2015,35)
    | Pablo Anaya, Michael Hachula, Christian Offermanns
  • Externe Working Papers

    Floating with a Load of FX Debt?

    Countries with de jure floating exchange rate regimes are often reluctant to allow their currencies to float freely in practice. One reason why countries may wish to limit exchange rate volatility is potential negative balance sheet effects due to currency mismatches on the balance sheets of firms and households. In this paper, we show in a sample of 15 emerging market economies that countries with ...

    Washington D.C.: IMF, 2015, 35 S.
    (IMF Working Paper ; 15/284)
    | Tatsiana Kliatskova, Uffe Mikkelsen
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