Proceedings
1975 - 2013
From Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Contact information at EDIRC. Bibliographic data for series maintained by Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Research Library (). Access Statistics for this journal.
Is something missing from the series or not right? See the RePEc data check for the archive and series.
2003, articles Nov
- Technology, productivity, and public policy: a conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, November 7-8, 2003

- Anonymous
- Tracking the new economy: using growth theory to detect changes in trend productivity

- James Kahn and Robert Rich
- Growth, capital shares, and a new perspective on production functions

- Charles Jones
- The political economy of intellectual property treaties

- Suzanne Scotchmer
- Incentives and invention in universities

- Saul Lach and Mark Schankerman
- Relative prices and relative prosperity

- Chang-Tai Hsieh and Pete Klenow
- Frictionless technology diffusion: the case of tractors

- Rodolfo Manuelli and Ananth Seshadri
- The skill content of recent technological change: an empirical exploration

- David Autor, Frank Levy and Richard Murnane
2003, articles Mar
- Dynamics of corporate earnings

- Robert Hall
- What explains the stock market's reaction to Federal Reserve policy?

- Ben Bernanke and Kenneth Kuttner
- The case for open-market purchases in a liquidity trap

- Alan Auerbach and Maurice Obstfeld
- Exchange rates and fundamentals

- Charles Engel and Kenneth West
- What does the yield curve tell us about GDP growth?

- Andrew Ang, Monika Piazzesi and Min Wei
- A joint econometric model of macroeconomic and term structure

- Peter Hördahl, Oreste Tristani and David Vestin
- The strength in consumer durables and housing

- Donald L. Kohn
- Exchange rates and fundamentals - comments

- Clive Granger
- The excess sensitivity of long-term interest rates: evidence and implications for macroeconomic models

- Refet Gürkaynak, Brian P. Sack and Eric Swanson
- Finance and macroeconomics: a conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco and the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, February 28- March 1, 2003

- Anonymous
2002, articles Nov
- Technological change: a workshop sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco and the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, November 14-15, 2002

- Anonymous
- Productivity growth in the Industrial Revolution: a new growth accounting perspective

- Nicholas Crafts
- The transition to a new economy after the Second Industrial Revolution

- Andrew Atkeson and Patrick Kehoe
- The baby boom and baby bust: some macroeconomics for population economics

- Jeremy Greenwood, Ananth Seshadri and Guillaume Vandenbroucke
- The baby boom and baby bust: some macroeconomics for population economics (discussion)

- Matthias Doepke
- Vintage capital as an origin of inequalities

- Andreas Hornstein, Per Krusell and Giovanni Violante
- Human capital and technology diffusion

- Jess Benhabib and Mark Spiegel
- Importing technology

- Francesco Caselli and Daniel Wilson
2002, articles Sep
- Financial issues in the Pacific Basin region: a conference sponsored by the Center for Pacific Basin Monetary and Economic Studies (Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco) and the Journal of the Japanese and International Economies, September 26-27, 2002

- Anonymous
- The impact of Japan’s financial stabilization laws on bank equity values

- Mark Spiegel and Nobuyoshi Yamori
- The high demand for international reserves in the Far East: what's going on?

- Joshua Aizenman and Nancy Marion
- Loans to Japanese borrowers

- David C. Smith
- Post-crisis exchange rate policy in five Asian countries: filling in the 'hollow middle'?

- Leonardo Hernandez and Peter Montiel
- Financial intermediation, agency and collateral and the dynamics of banking crises: theory and evidence for the Japanese banking crisis

- Robert Dekle and Kenneth Kletzer
- The value of banking relationships during a financial crisis: evidence from failures of Japanese banks

- Elijah Brewer, Hesna Genay, William C. Hunter and George G. Kaufman
2002, articles Mar
- Macroeconomic models for monetary policy: a conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco and the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, March 1-2, 2002

- Anonymous
- Empirical analysis of policy interventions

- Eric Leeper and Tao Zha
- Monetary policy in an estimated stochastic dynamic general equilibrium model of the Euro area

- Frank Smets and Raf Wouters
- An optimizing model of U.S. wage and price dynamics

- Argia Sbordone
- Should monetary policy target labor's share of income?

- Jeremy B. Rudd and Karl Whelan
- Inflation dynamics, marginal cost, and the output gap: evidence from three countries

- Katharine Neiss and Edward Nelson
- Macroeconomic switching

- Christopher Sims and Tao Zha
- What is a good macroeconomic model for a central bank to use? panel discussion

- Lawrence Christiano, Adrian Pagan and David J. Stockton
- What is a good macroeconomic model for a central bank to use? panel discussion

- Lawrence Christiano, Adrian Pagan and David J. Stockton
2001, articles Jun
- Nominal rigidities: a conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, the National Bureau of Economic Research Inc., and the Central Bank Institute of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, June 16, 2001

- Anonymous
- Optimal fiscal and monetary policy under sticky prices

- Stephanie Schmitt-Grohe and Martín Uribe
- Sticky information versus sticky prices: a proposal to replace the New-Keynesian Phillips curve

- N. Gregory Mankiw and Ricardo Reis
- Closed and open economy models of business cycles with marked-up and sticky prices

- Robert Barro and Silvana Tenreyro
- Predicting the effects of Federal Reserve policy in a sticky price model: an analytical approach

- Ellen McGrattan
- Nominal rigidities and the dynamic effects of a shock to monetary policy

- Lawrence Christiano, Martin Eichenbaum and Charles Evans
2001, articles Mar
- Forecasting output and inflation: the role of asset prices

- James Stock and Mark Watson
- Asset prices, exchange rates, and monetary policy: a conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco and the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, March 2-3, 2001

- Anonymous
- Simple monetary policy rules and exchange rate uncertainty

- Kai Leitemo and Ulf Söderström
- Asset prices, financial conditions and the transmission of monetary policy

- Charles A. E. Goodhart and Boris Hofmann
- External constraints on monetary policy and the financial accelerator

- Mark Gertler, Simon Gilchrist and Fabio M. Natalucci
- Inflation targeting and the liquidity trap

- Bennett McCallum
- Monetary policy rules for an open economy

- Nicoletta Batini, Richard Harrison and Stephen Millard
| |