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Proceedings

1985 - 1996

From Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
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1992

What is a business cycle? pp. 3-83
Victor Zarnowitz and James H. Stock (ary)
The opening of new markets for bank assets pp. 3-38
Gary Gorton, George Pennacchi and Stuart I. Greenbaum (ary)
Interstate banking, bank expansion and valuation pp. 41-98
Gerald Hanweck and Peter S. Rose (ary)
The cycle before new-classical economics pp. 85-117
Gary L. Benjamin and David Laidler
The market for home mortgage credit: recent changes and future prospects pp. 99-127
Patric Hendershott and Herbert M. Kaufman (ary)
For a return to pragmatism pp. 121-132
Olivier Blanchard
Equity underwriting risk pp. 129-158
J. Nellie Liang and James M. O'Brien
The Cowles Commission approach, real business cycles theories, and New- Keynesian economics pp. 133-157
Ray Fair and Arnold Zellner
The competitive impact of foreign commercial banks in the United States pp. 161-209
Gary S. Anderson and Lawrence G. Goldberg
How does it matter? Commentary: whatever happened to contracyclical policy? pp. 161-186
Benjamin M. Friedman and Michael Darby
Deja vu all over again: commentary pp. 189-196
Alan Blinder
Business cycle development and the agenda for business cycle research: commentary pp. 197-201
Herschel Grossman
Where do we stand?: commentary pp. 202-209
Michael Parkin
The competitive impact of foreign underwriters in the United States pp. 211-245
Robert Nachtmann and Frederick J. Phillips-Patrick
The changing market in financial services: proceedings of the fifteenth annual Economic Policy Conference held in 1990
R. Gilbert
The Business Cycle: Theories and Evidence: Proceedings of the Sixteenth Annual Economic Policy Conference of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis (held October 17-18 1991)
Michael Belongia and Michelle Garfinkel

1989

The Fed at seventy-five pp. 3-107
Allan Meltzer
Why does the Fed smooth interest rates? pp. 111-157
Alex Cukierman
Precommitment to rules in monetary policy pp. 159-185
Edmund Phelps
Monitoring monetary aggregates under risk aversion pp. 189-245
William Barnett, Melvin Hinich and Piyu Yue
Money and business cycles: a real business cycle interpretation
Charles Plosser
Monetary policy on the 75th anniversary of the Federal Reserve system: proceedings of the fourteenth annual Economic Policy Conference, held on October 19-20, 1989
Michael Belongia

1988

Bubbles and stock-price volatility pp. 9-29
Behzad Diba
Do fundamentals, bubbles, or neither explain stock prices? Some international evidence pp. 31-79
Gerald Dwyer and Rik Hafer
Economic and financial data as nonlinear processes pp. 81-139
James B. Ramsey
Statistical analysis of price and basic behavior: October 12-26, 1987, S&P 500 futures and cash pp. 141-178
J. Douglas Gordon, Gregory Kuserk, Eugene Moriarty and George Wang
The swiftness of divine retribution and its tendency to mistake its target: an analysis of the Brady Report pp. 179-201
David D. Haddock
The stock market--bubbles, volatility and chaos: proceedings of the thirteenth annual Economic Policy Conference, held on October 21-22, 1988
Gerald Dwyer and Rik Hafer

1987

The U.S. external deficit: its causes and persistence pp. 3-127
Peter Hooper and Catherine Mann
The current account and macroeconomic policy: an econometric analysis pp. 131-191
John Taylor
The impact of the U.S. current account deficit on other OECD countries pp. 193-235
Jeffrey R. Shafer
Trade deficits in the long run pp. 239-285
Barry Eichengreen
An evaluation of policies to resolve the trade deficit pp. 287-315
Sven Arndt
U.S. trade deficit: causes, consequences and cures: proceedings of the twelfth annual Economic Policy Conference, held on October 23 and 24, 1987
Albert E. Burger

1986

Differences of opinion in financial markets pp. 3-40
Hal Varian
Risk, exchange market intervention, and private speculative behavior in a small open economy pp. 41-75
Stephen J Turnovsky
Risk and the economy: a finance perspective pp. 79-124
K. C. Chan and René Stulz
Management versus economic conditions as contributors to the recent increase in bank failures pp. 125-154
Richard W. Nelson
Empirical assessment of foreign currency risk premiums pp. 157-196
Richard Meese
Country risk and the structure of international financial intermediation pp. 197-233
Donald Lessard
How open is the U.S. economy?: proceedings of the tenth annual Economic Policy Conference held on October 12-13, 1985
Rik Hafer
Financial risk--theory, evidence and implications: proceedings of the eleventh annual Economic Policy Conference, held on November 14 and 15th, 1986
Courtenay C. Stone

1985

The United States as an open economy pp. 3-31
Richard N. Cooper
International capital mobility and crowding-out in the U.S. economy: imperfect integration of financial markets or of goods markets? pp. 33-74
Jeffrey Frankel
A VAR analysis of economic interdependence: Canada, the United States, and the rest of the world pp. 77-136
John Kuszczak and John D. Murray
Implications of the U.S. net capital inflow pp. 137-167
Benjamin M. Friedman
International interdependence and the constraints on macroeconomic policies pp. 171-210
Jacob A. Frenkel
The dollar exchange rate and international monetary cooperation pp. 211-235
Ronald McKinnon
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