Search Results

Showing results 1 to 10 of approximately 67.

(refine search)
SORT BY: PREVIOUS / NEXT
Author:Fisher, Jonas D. M. 

Newsletter
Household debt

Chicago Fed Letter , Issue Nov

Working Paper
The role of housing in labor reallocation

This paper builds a dynamic general equilibrium model of cities and uses it to analyze the role of local housing markets and moving costs in determining the character and extent of labor reallocation in the US economy. Labor reallocation in the model is driven by idiosyncratic city-specific productivity shocks, which we measure using a dataset that we compile using more than 350 U.S. cities for the years 1984 to 2008. Based on this measurement, we find that our model is broadly consistent with the city-level evidence on net and gross population flows, employment, wages and residential ...
Working Paper Series , Paper WP-2010-18

Newsletter
What are the implications of rising commodity prices for inflation and monetary policy?

The recent run-ups in oil and other commodity prices and their implications for inflation and monetary policy have grabbed the attention of many commentators in the media. Clearly, higher prices of food and energy end up in the broadest measures of consumer price inflation, such as the Consumer Price Index. Since the mid-1980s, however, sharp increases and decreases in commodity prices have had little, if any, impact on core inflation, the measure that excludes food and energy prices.
Chicago Fed Letter , Issue May

Working Paper
Algorithms for solving dynamic models with occasionally binding constraints

Working Paper Series, Macroeconomic Issues , Paper 94-6

Working Paper
The role of real wages, productivity and fiscal policy in Germany's Great Depression 1928-1937

We study the behavior of output, employment, consumption, and investment in Germany during the Great Depression of 1928-37. In this time period, real wages were countercyclical, and productivity and fiscal policy were procyclical. We use the neoclassical growth model to investigate how much these factors contribute to the Depression. We find that real wages, which were significantly above their market clearing levels, were the most important factor for the economic decline in the Depression. Changes in productivity and fiscal policy were also important for the decline and recovery. Even ...
Working Paper Series , Paper WP-01-07

Journal Article
When can we forecast inflation?

This article reassesses recent work that has challenged the usefulness of inflation forecasts. The authors find that inflation forecasts were informative in 1977-84 and 1993-2000, but less informative in 1985-92. They also find that standard forecasting models, while generally poor at forecasting the magnitude of inflation, are good at forecasting the direction of change of inflation.
Economic Perspectives , Volume 26 , Issue Q I , Pages 32-44

Newsletter
Technology shocks and the business cycle

Chicago Fed Letter , Issue Mar

Working Paper
(S, s) inventory policies in general equilibrium

We study the aggregate implications of (S,s) inventory policies in a dynamic general equilibrium model with aggregate uncertainty. Firms in the model's retail sector face idiosyncratic demand risk, and (S,s) inventory policies are optimal because of fixed order costs. The distribution of inventory holdings affects the aggregate outcome in two ways: variation in the decision to order and variation in the rate of sale through the pricing decisions of retailers. We find that both mechanisms must operate to reconcile observations that orders are more volatile than, and inventory investment is ...
Working Paper Series, Macroeconomic Issues , Paper WP-96-24

Working Paper
Fiscal policy in the aftermath of 9/11

This paper investigates the nature of U.S. fiscal policy in the aftermath of 9/11. We argue that the recent dramatic fall in the government surplus and the large fall in tax rates cannot be accounted for by either the state of the U.S. economy as of 9/11 or as the typical response of fiscal policy to a large exogenous rise in military expenditures. Our evidence suggests that, had tax rates responded in the way they ?normally? do to large exogenous changes in government spending, aggregate output would have been lower and the surplus would not have changed by much. The unusually large fall in ...
Working Paper Series , Paper WP-04-06

Working Paper
The limits of forward guidance

The viability of forward guidance as a monetary policy tool depends on the horizon over which it can be communicated and its influence on expectations over that horizon. We develop and estimate a model of imperfect central bank communications and use it to measure how effectively the Fed has managed expectations about future interest rates and the influence of its communications on macroeconomic outcomes. Standard models assume central banks have perfect control over expectations about the policy rate up to an arbitrarily long horizon and this is the source of the so-called ?forward guidance ...
Working Paper Series , Paper WP-2019-3

FILTER BY year

FILTER BY Content Type

Working Paper 40 items

Newsletter 13 items

Journal Article 8 items

Report 3 items

Discussion Paper 2 items

Conference Paper 1 items

show more (1)

FILTER BY Author

FILTER BY Jel Classification

E52 5 items

E31 4 items

E00 3 items

E0 2 items

E1 2 items

E3 2 items

show more (22)

FILTER BY Keywords

Business cycles 18 items

Monetary policy 9 items

Fiscal policy 6 items

Employment (Economic theory) 5 items

Inflation (Finance) 4 items

Macroeconomics 4 items

show more (98)

PREVIOUS / NEXT