Search Results

Showing results 1 to 10 of approximately 22.

(refine search)
SORT BY: PREVIOUS / NEXT
Author:Haltmaier, Jane 

Working Paper
The importance of capital formation in the recent productivity slowdown

Working Papers in Applied Economic Theory , Paper 104

Working Paper
Do recessions affect potential output?

A number of previous studies have looked at the effect of financial crises on actual output several years beyond the crisis. The purpose of this paper is to examine whether the growth of potential output also is affected by recessions, whether or not they include financial crises. Trend per capita output growth is calculated using HP filters, and average growth is compared for the two years preceding a recession, the two years immediately following a recession peak, and the two years after that. Panel regressions are run to determine whether characteristics of recessions, including depth, ...
International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 1066

Working Paper
Predicting cycles in economic activity

Predicting cycles in economic activity is one of the more challenging but important aspects of economic forecasting. This paper reports the results from estimation of binary probit models that predict the probability of an economy being in a recession using a variety of financial and real activity indicators. The models are estimated for eight countries, both individually and using a panel regression. Although the success of the models varies, they are all able to identify a significant number of recessionary periods correctly.
International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 926

Working Paper
The use of high-frequency data in model-based forecasting at the Federal Reserve Board

Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 24

Journal Article
An intersectoral analysis of the secular productivity slowdown

Economic Review , Issue Fall , Pages 7-28

Working Paper
The role of China in Asia: engine, conduit, or steamroller?

This paper assesses China's role in Asia as an independent engine of growth, as a conduit of demand from the industrial countries, and as a competitor for export markets. We provide both macroeconomic and microeconomic evidence. The macroeconomic analysis focuses on the impact of U.S. and Chinese demand on the output of the Asian economies by estimating growth comovements and VARs. The results suggest an increasing role of China as an independent source of growth. The microeconomic analysis decomposes trade into basic products, parts and components, and finished goods. We find a large role ...
International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 904

Journal Article
Productivity slowdown: II

FRBSF Economic Letter

Working Paper
Disaggregation and the labor productivity index

Working Papers in Applied Economic Theory , Paper 106

Working Paper
Challenges for the future of Chinese economic growth

The Chinese economy has been growing at a rapid pace for over thirty years. Most of this growth has come from higher labor productivity, while growth of employment has diminished along with a slower rate of increase in the working-age population. This paper looks at the challenges that China will face over the next two decades in maintaining its rapid pace of economic growth, especially as working-age population growth slows further and then begins to decline. Key questions include whether China will be able to continue to devote nearly half of its GDP to investment, whether such investment ...
International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 1072

Journal Article
More or less equal?

FRBSF Economic Letter

FILTER BY year

FILTER BY Content Type

FILTER BY Jel Classification

E32 1 items

F1 1 items

F17 1 items

F4 1 items

PREVIOUS / NEXT