Search results for "Econometric"

showing 10 items of 3780 documents

Efficiency, endogenous and exogenous credit risk in the banking systems of the Euro area

2005

The implantation of the Euro in 11 of the EU states has driven the big banks to expand their presence in other European countries, which may have negative consequences on their credit risk in view of the disadvantages involved in entering new markets. The aim of this study is to analyse the efficiency and the credit risk of the banks of the most important countries of the Euro area, using a one-stage parametric stochastic procedure that allows one to identify whether the behaviour towards risk of the banks analysed was more cautious or more reckless during the period analysed. The results indicate that adjustments for risk are important in the case of profit efficiency but not in the case o…

MacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsCost efficiencyEconomicsFinancial risk managementMonetary economicsProfit efficiencyFinanceCredit riskApplied Financial Economics
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Why banks are not too big to fail - evidence from the CDS market

2013

This paper argues that bank size is not a satisfactory measure of systemic risk because it neglects aspects such as interconnectedness, correlation, and the economic context. In order to differentiate the effect of bank size from that of systemic importance, we control for systemic risk using the CoVaR measure introduced by Adrian and Brunnermeier (2011). We show that a bank's contribution to systemic risk has a significant negative effect on banks’ credit default swap (CDS) spreads, supporting the too‐systemic‐to‐fail hypothesis. Once we control for systemic risk, bank size (relative to gross domestic product (GDP)) has either no or a positive effect on banks’ CDS spreads. The effect of ba…

MacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsCredit default swapOrder (exchange)Financial crisisEconomicsSystemic riskDebt ratioMonetary economicsToo big to failManagement Monitoring Policy and LawGross domestic productBailoutEconomic Policy
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Searching for Threshold Effects in the Evolution of Budget Deficits: An Application to the Spanish Case

2004

Abstract In this paper, we use recent developments on threshold autoregressive (TAR) models that allow us to derive endogenously threshold effects in the evolution of the Spanish budget deficit. Specifically, a mean-reverting dynamic behaviour of the budget deficit should be expected once such threshold is reached.

MacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsDeficit spendingPublic economicsAutoregressive modeljel:E62EconomicsTarjel:H62FinanceFiscal policy Budget deficits Threshold effects TAR models.Fiscal policy
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Tax Design in the OECD: A Test of the Hines-Summers Hypothesis

2011

This paper investigates the effects of economic size and trade openness on tax design in the OECD. Using data for 30 OECD countries over the 1965–2007 period, we test the recently proposed Hines-Summers [2009] Hypothesis, according to which the smaller the size and the greater the openness of the economy, the more it will rely on expenditure taxes and the less on income taxes. Our findings show that the Hines-Summers Hypothesis can claim broad, statistically significant, and robust empirical support in the OECD data sets we examined.

MacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsDouble taxationIncome tax; Consumption tax; Country size; Trade opennessjel:E60Monetary economicsTax reformInternational taxationjel:H20Consumption taxValue-added taxIncome taxOpenness to experienceEconomicsState income taxincome tax
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Down and out in Italian towns: Measuring the impact of economic downturns on crime

2016

The paper investigates the effect of local economic conditions on crime. The study focuses on Italy’s local labor markets and analyzes the response of crime to the severe slump of 2007-2011. It shows that the downturn led to a significant increase in economic-related offenses that do not require particular criminal skills or tools (namely, thefts).

MacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsDownloadmedia_common.quotation_subjectPublic policyDistribution (economics)HGlobalizationRlab0502 economics and businessDevelopment economicsEconomics050207 economics050205 econometrics media_commoncomputer.programming_languagePovertybusiness.industry05 social sciencesKCrime Italy Economic crisesCapital (economics)UnemploymentbusinesscomputerFinance
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Discretionary vs nondiscretionary in fiscal mechanism – non-automatic fiscal stabilisers vs automatic fiscal stabilisers

2015

The goal of the present study is to increase the intelligibility of macroeconomic phenomena triggered by governmental intervention in economy by means of fiscal policies. During cyclical movements, fiscal policy can play an important role in order to help stabilise the economy. But discretionary policy usually implies implementation lags and is not automatically reversed when economic conditions change. In contrast, automatic fiscal stabilisers (SFA) ensure a prompter, and self-correcting fiscal response. The present study aims to tackle the topic of discretionary vs nondiscretionary characteristic of fiscal stabilisers (SF). In this context, the scope of the research undertaking is to laun…

MacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsEconomic policyFiscal policy; fiscal mechanism; non-automatic fiscal stabilisers (SfnA); automatic fiscal stabilisers (SFA)EconomicsScientific debateDiscretionary policyFiscal policyEconomic Research-Ekonomska Istraživanja
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A rationale for macroeconomic policy coordination: Evidence based on the Spanish peseta

1995

Abstract In the present paper two types of monetary model for the determination of the peseta/DM exchange rate have been specified for the period 1980–1989. One includes the fundamental variables corresponding to the two countries concerned (Germany and Spain) and the other is an aggregate model, where the explanatory variables are the ratios between the fundamentals from the countries inside the ERM of the EMS, and the Spanish fundamentals. The empirical results show that the aggregate model has greater explanatory power, supporting (indirectly) further monetary policy coordination.

MacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsEvidence-based practiceExchange ratePolitical Science and International RelationsMonetary policyEconomicsMonetary economicsExplanatory powerEuropean Journal of Political Economy
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Disaggregate Real Exchange Rate Behaviour

2007

In this paper, we re-examine the “PPP Puzzle” using sectoral disaggregated data. Specifically, we first analyse the mean reversion speeds of real exchange rates for a number of different sectors in eleven industrial economies and then focus on relating these rates to variables identified in the literature as key determinants of CPI-based real exchange rates, namely: the trade balance, productivity and the mark up. In particular, we seek to understand to what extent the relationships existing at the aggregate level are borne out at the disaggregate level. We believe that this analysis can help shed light on the PPP puzzle.

MacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsExchange rateMean reversionEconomicsBalance of tradejel:F31Aggregate leveljel:F41jel:C33Real Exchange Rates Sectoral Prices Panel Data MethodsProductivity
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Long-Run Growth and Volatility: Which Source Really Matters

2010

The aim of the article is to analyse the relationship between long-run growth and business cycle volatility. In particular, the main purpose of this article is to identify which source of volatility is most detrimental to growth. Using cross-country data from 1970 to 2000, and several indicators of volatility (such as inflation, exchange rate, government expenditure, output and investment volatility) this article shows that although, all these measures of volatility are remarkably harmful for growth, business cycle investment volatility is the main source that hampers long-run growth. This relation is robust to different measures of business cycle, and to different sub-samples of countries.

MacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsExchange rateVolatility GrowthVolatility swapVolatility smileBusiness cycleEconomicsGovernment expenditureVolatility (finance)Volatility risk premium
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Evolution of the Global Distribution of Carbon Dioxide: A Finite Mixture Analysis

2015

Economists and environmental policymakers have recently begun advocating a bottom-up approach to climate change mitigation, focusing on reduction targets for groups of nations, rather than large scale global policies. We advance this discussion by taking a quantitative perspective, focusing on econometric identification of groups of countries that have statistically similar distributions of carbon emissions using a broad range of finite mixture models. Nearly all of our results yield a consistent pattern: after 1980, there are two distinct emissions distributions, and that these distributions continue to evolve over time. We provide a rigorous analysis of these distributional differences al…

MacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsFinite mixturePublic economicsjel:C30Carbon emissions; Emissions groups; Heterogeneity; Abatement policy; Finite mixture modelsCarbon emissionjel:C38Climate change mitigationGlobal distributionGreenhouse gasAbatement policyEconomicsHeterogeneityVolatility (finance)Settore SECS-P/01 - Economia PoliticaEmpirical evidenceEmissions groupFinite mixture model
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