Quarterly Review
1977 - 2025
From Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
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1993, volume 17, articles Fall
- In order to form a more perfect monetary union pp. 2-13

- Arthur J. Rolnick, Bruce Smith and Warren Weber
- International business cycles: theory vs. evidence pp. 14-29

- David Backus, Patrick Kehoe and Finn Kydland
1993, volume 17, articles Sum
- Putting home economics into macroeconomics pp. 2-11

- Jeremy Greenwood, Richard Rogerson and Randall Wright
- The macroeconomic effects of world trade in financial assets pp. 12-21

- Harold Cole
1993, volume 17, articles Spr
- Changes in the wealth of nations pp. 3-16

- Stephen Parente and Edward Prescott
- Early progress on the \\"problem of economic development\\" pp. 17-35

- James Schmitz
1993, volume 17, articles Win
- On the emergence of parliamentary government: the role of private information pp. 2-16

- Edward Green
- Explaining financial market facts: the importance of incomplete markets and transaction costs pp. 17-31

- S. Aiyagari
1992, volume 16, articles Fall
- How the U.S. Treasury should auction its debt pp. 3-12

- Varadarajan Chari and Robert Weber
- No relief in sight for the U.S. economy pp. 13-20

- David E. Runkle
1992, volume 16, articles Sum
- SPDAs and GICs: like money in the bank? pp. 2-17

- Richard M. Todd and Neil Wallace
- Acceptability, means of payment, and media of exchange pp. 18-21

- Nobuhiro Kiyotaki and Randall Wright
1992, volume 16, articles Spr
- The labor market in real business cycle theory pp. 2-12

- Gary Hansen and Randall Wright
- Resolving the national bank note paradox pp. 13-21

- Bruce Champ, Neil Wallace and Warren Weber
1992, volume 16, articles Win
- How little we know about deficit policy effects pp. 2-11

- Preston J. Miller and William Roberds
- Direct investment: a doubtful alternative to international debt pp. 12-22

- Harold Cole and William B. English
1991, volume 15, articles Fall
- Can a \\"credit crunch\\" be efficient? pp. 3-17

- Edward Green and Soo-Nam Oh
- A bleak outlook for the U.S. economy pp. 18-25

- David E. Runkle
1991, volume 15, articles Sum
- Evaluating the welfare effects of alternative monetary arrangements pp. 3-10

- Ayse Imrohoroglu and Edward Prescott
- The labor market implications of unemployment insurance and short-term compensation pp. 11-19

- Randall Wright
1991, volume 15, articles Spr
- Investigating the banking consolidation trend pp. 3-15

- John H. Boyd and Stanley L. Graham
- Defending zero inflation: all for naught pp. 16-20

- W. Lee Hoskins
- Response to a defense of zero inflation pp. 21-24

- S. Aiyagari
- Procyclical prices: a demi-myth? pp. 25-28

- Holger C. Wolf
1991, volume 15, articles Win
- Modeling the liquidity effect of a money shock pp. 3-34

- Lawrence Christiano
1990, volume 14, articles Fall
- Bad news from a forecasting model of the U.S. economy pp. 2-10

- David E. Runkle
- A banking model in which partial suspension is best pp. 11-23

- Neil Wallace
1990, volume 14, articles Sum
- Deflating the case for zero inflation pp. 2-11

- S. Aiyagari
1990, volume 14, articles Spr
- Business cycles: real facts and a monetary myth pp. 3-18

- Finn Kydland and Edward Prescott
- Vector autoregression evidence on monetarism: another look at the robustness debate pp. 19-37

- Richard M. Todd
1990, volume 14, articles Win
- Deposit insurance reform; or, deregulation is the cart, not the horse pp. 3-11

- John H. Kareken
- Why markets in foreign exchange are different from other markets pp. 12-18

- Neil Wallace
- A suggestion for oversimplifying the theory of money pp. 19-26

- Neil Wallace
1990, volume 4, articles Sum
- The simple analytics of commodity futures markets: do they stabilize prices? Do they raise welfare? pp. 12-24

- Varadarajan Chari and Ravi Jagannathan
1989, volume 13, articles Fall
- P*: not the inflation forecaster's holy grail pp. 3-18

- Lawrence Christiano
- The U.S. economy in 1990 and 1991: continued expansion likely pp. 19-26

- David E. Runkle
- A simple way to estimate current-quarter GNP pp. 27-31

- Terry Fitzgerald and Preston J. Miller
1989, volume 13, articles Sum
- Banking without deposit insurance or bank panics: lessons from a model of the U.S. national banking system pp. 3-19

- Varadarajan Chari
- Bank failures, financial restrictions, and aggregate fluctuations: Canada and the United States, 1870-1913 pp. 20-40

- Stephen Williamson
1989, volume 13, articles Spr
- Is Japan's saving rate high? pp. 3-9

- Fumio Hayashi
- Understanding Japan's saving rate: the reconstruction hypothesis pp. 10-25

- Lawrence Christiano
- Are economic forecasts rational? pp. 26-33

- Michael Keane and David E. Runkle
1989, volume 13, articles Win
- The U.S. economy in 1989 and 1990: walking a fine line pp. 3-10

- Preston J. Miller and David E. Runkle
- Gramm-Rudman-Hollings' hold on budget policy: losing its grip? pp. 11-21

- Preston J. Miller
- How should taxes be set? pp. 22-32

- S. Aiyagari
1988, volume 12, articles Fall
- Another attempt to explain an illiquid banking system: the Diamond and Dybvig model with sequential service taken seriously pp. 3-16

- Neil Wallace
1988, volume 12, articles Sum
- Modeling the impact of an energy price shock on interregional income transfer pp. 2-17

- Clarence W. Nelson
- The relationship between money and prices: some historical evidence reconsidered pp. 18-32

- Bruce Smith
1988, volume 12, articles Spr
- The profitability and risk effects of allowing bank holding companies to merge with other financial firms: a simulation study pp. 3-20

- John H. Boyd and Stanley L. Graham
- Explaining the demand for free bank notes pp. 21-35

- Arthur J. Rolnick and Warren Weber
1988, volume 12, articles Win
- Why no crunch from the crash? pp. 2-7

- David E. Runkle
- Economic fluctuations without shocks to fundamentals; or, does the stock market dance to its own music? pp. 8-24

- S. Aiyagari