Working Papers
From Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
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- 02-2: A quantile regression analysis of the cross section of stock market returns

- Michelle Barnes and Anthony W. Hughes
- 02-1: The behavior of China's stock prices in response to the proposal and approval of bonus issues

- Michelle Barnes and Shiguang Ma
- 01-06: Optimal monetary policy in a model with habit formation and explicit tax distortions

- Jeffrey Fuhrer
- 01-05: Are taste and technology parameters stable? a test of \"deep\" parameter stability in real business cycle models of the U.S. economy

- Daniel G. Swaine
- 01-04: Measuring the incentive effects of state tax policies toward capital investment

- George A. Plesko and Robert Tannenwald
- 01-3: State user costs of capital

- Charles Ian Mead
- 01-2: Time present and time past: a duration analysis of IMF program spells

- Joseph Joyce
- 01-1: Transition dynamics in vintage capital models: explaining the postwar catch-up of Germany and Japan

- Simon Gilchrist and John Williams
- 00-5: Optimal monetary policy in a model with habit formation

- Jeffrey Fuhrer
- 00-4: Troubled banks, impaired foreign direct investment: the role of relative access to credit

- Michael Klein, Joe Peek and Eric Rosengren
- 00-3: Deposit insurance, capital requirements, and financial stability

- Richard W. Kopcke
- 00-2: Identifying the macroeconomic effect of loan supply shocks

- Joe Peek, Eric Rosengren and Geoffrey Tootell
- 00-1: Monetary policy, housing investment, and heterogeneous regional markets

- Michael Fratantoni and Scott Schuh
- 99-11: Job creation, job destruction, and the real exchange rate

- Michael Klein, Scott Schuh and Robert Triest
- 99-10: Gross job flows and firms

- Scott Schuh and Robert Triest
- 99-9: Is the U.S. economy characterized by endogenous growth?: a time-series test of two stochastic growth models

- Daniel G. Swaine
- 99-8: Does the Federal Reserve possess an exploitable informational advantage?

- Joe Peek, Eric Rosengren and Geoffrey Tootell
- 99-7: Is bank supervision central to central banking?

- Joe Peek, Eric Rosengren and Geoffrey Tootell
- 99-6: Capital account liberalization, financial depth, and economic growth

- Michael Klein and Giovanni Olivei
- 99-5: Network externalities and technology adoption: lessons from electronic payments

- Gautam Gowrisankaran and Joanna Stavins
- 99-4: Are \"deep\" parameters stable? the Lucas critique as an empirical hypothesis

- Arturo Estrella and Jeffrey Fuhrer
- 99-3: Fiscal retrenchment and the level of economic activity

- Giovanni Olivei
- 99-2: Productivity shocks, investment, and the real interest rate

- Giovanni Olivei
- 99-1: Impact of greater bank disclosure amidst a banking crisis

- John S. Jordan, Joe Peek and Eric Rosengren
- 98-9: Determinants of the Japan premium: actions speak louder than words

- Joe Peek and Eric Rosengren
- 98-8: Will greater disclosure and transparency prevent the next banking crisis?

- Eric Rosengren
- 98-7: Japanese banking problems: implications for Southeast Asia

- Joe Peek and Eric Rosengren
- 98-6: Weekends can be rough: revisiting the weekend effect in stock prices

- Peter Fortune
- 98-5: Dynamic inconsistencies: counterfactual implications of a class of rational expectations models

- Arturo Extrella and Jeffrey Fuhrer
- 98-4: What do cross-sectional growth regressions tell us about convergence?

- Daniel G. Swaine
- 98-3: The poor performance of foreign bank subsidiaries: were the problems acquired or created?

- Faith Kasirye, Joe Peek and Eric Rosengren
- 98-2: Does the Federal Reserve have an informational advantage? you can bank on it

- Joe Peek, Eric Rosengren and Geoffrey Tootell
- 98-1: An optimizing model for monetary policy analysis: can habit formation help?

- Jeffrey Fuhrer
- 97-8: The subsidy from state and local tax deductibility: trends, methodological issues, and its value after federal tax reform

- Robert Tannenwald
- 97-7: Input and output inventories

- Brad Humphreys, Louis Maccini and Scott Schuh
- 97-6: The effect of pricing on demand and revenue in Federal Reserve ACH payment processing

- Paul Bauer and Joanna Stavins
- 97-5: Collateral damage: effects of the Japanese real estate collapse on credit availability and real activity in the United States

- Joe Peek and Eric Rosengren
- 97-4: Manager's opportunistic trading of their firms' shares: a case study of executives in the banking industry

- John S. Jordan
- 97-3: Is banking supervision central to central banking?

- Joe Peek, Eric Rosengren and Geoffrey Tootell
- 97-2: Property tax limits and local fiscal behavior: did Massachusetts cities and towns spend too little on town services under proposition 2 1/2?

- Katharine Bradbury
- 97-1: Bank consolidation and small business lending: it's not just bank size that matters

- Joe Peek and Eric Rosengren
- 96-12: Unifying empirical and theoretical models of housing supply

- Christopher Mayer and Craig Somerville
- 96-11: Reserve banks, the discount rate recommendation, and FOMC policy

- Geoffrey Tootell
- 96-10: Can studies of application denials and mortgage defaults uncover taste-based discrimination?

- Geoffrey Tootell
- 96-9: Tax-exempt bonds really do subsidize municipal capital!

- Peter Fortune
- 96-8: Towards a compact, empirically verified rational expectations model for monetary policy analysis

- Jeffrey Fuhrer
- 96-7: Price discrimination in the airline market: the effect of market concentration

- Joanna Stavins
- 96-6: Redlining in Boston: do mortgage lenders discriminate against neighborhoods?

- Geoffrey Tootell
- 96-5: Will legislated early intervention prevent the next banking crisis?

- Joe Peek and Eric Rosengren
- 96-4: Maturity structure of term premia with time-varying expected returns

- Mark A. Hooker