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Author:Foerster, Andrew T. 

Journal Article
How Have Changing Sectoral Trends Affected GDP Growth?

Trend GDP growth has slowed about 2.3 percentage points to 1.7% since 1950. Different economic sectors have contributed to this slowing to varying degrees depending on the distinct trends of technology and labor growth in each sector. The extent to which sectors influence overall growth depends on the degree of spillovers to other sectors, which amplifies the effect of sectoral changes. Three sectors with slowing growth and linkages to other sectors?construction, nondurable goods, and professional and business services?account for 60% of the decline in trend GDP growth.
FRBSF Economic Letter

Journal Article
Legislative update : Dividend tax cuts

Econ Focus , Volume 7 , Issue Fall , Pages 5

Journal Article
Idiosyncratic Sectoral Growth, Balanced Growth, and Sectoral Linkages

We study the growth properties of an economy where different sectors are linked by way of intermediates and potentially grow at different rates. We characterize the economy's equilibrium balanced growth path, and derive an analytical expression that summarizes how TFP growth in a given sector affects value added growth in every other sector and, therefore, aggregate GDP growth. We show in a special case that a version of Hulten's (1978) theorem, whereby the effects of changes in sector-specific productivity on GDP are entirely captured by that sector's share in GDP, also holds in growth rates ...
Economic Quarterly , Issue 2Q , Pages 79-101

Journal Article
The Changing Input-Output Network Structure of the U.S. Economy

U.S. industries have become less connected over the last 10 years, and service industries have become more central.
Economic Review , Issue Q II , Pages 23-49

Working Paper
Search with wage posting under sticky prices

Research Working Paper , Paper RWP 14-17

Journal Article
Are we working too hard or should we be working harder? A simple model of career concerns

Economic Quarterly , Volume 92 , Issue Win , Pages 79-91

Working Paper
Monetary policy regime switches and macroeconomic dynamic

This paper investigates how different monetary policy regime switching types impact macroeconomic dynamics. Policy switches that either affect the inflation target or the response to inflation deviations from target lead to different determinacy regions and different output, inflation, and interest rate distributions. With regime switching, the standard Taylor Principle breaks down in multiple ways; satisfying the Principle period-by-period is neither necessary nor sufficient for determinacy. Switching inflation targets primarily affects the economy's level, whereas switching inflation ...
Research Working Paper , Paper RWP 13-04

Working Paper
Uncertainty and fiscal cliffs

Motivated by the US Fiscal Cliff in 2012, this paper considers the short- and longer- term impact of uncertainty generated by fiscal policy. Empirical evidence shows increases in economic policy uncertainty lower investment and employment. Investment that is longer-lived and subject to a longer planning horizon responds to policy uncertainty with a lag, while capital that depreciates more quickly and can be installed with few costs falls immediately. A DSGE model incorporating uncertainty over future tax regimes produces responses to fiscal uncertainty that match key features of the data. The ...
Research Working Paper , Paper RWP 14-4

Journal Article
Unhealthy situation : nursing shortage threatens health care

Econ Focus , Volume 7 , Issue Fall , Pages 9

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