Search Constraints
Search Results
-
Creator: Kehoe, Timothy Jerome, 1953- and Prescott, Edward C. Description: The worldwide Great Depression of the 1930s was a watershed for both economic thought and economic policymaking. It led to the belief that market economies are inherently unstable and to the revolutionary work of John Maynard Keynes. Its impact on popular economic wisdom is still apparent today.
This book, which uses a common framework to study sixteen depressions, from the interwar period in Europe and America as well as from more recent times in Japan and Latin America, challenges the Keynesian theory of depressions. It develops and uses a methodology for studying depressions that relies on growth accounting and the general equilibrium growth model.
Each chapter of the book is accompanied by a data file that contains all of the data used in the analysis. These files can be found in the Great Depressions of the Twentieth Century: Supporting Data and Code collection.
Table of Contents
Great Depressions of the Twentieth Century by Timothy J. Kehoe and Edward C. Prescott
A Second Look at the U.S. Great Depression from a Neoclassical Perspective by Harold L. Cole and Lee E. Ohanian
The Great U.K. Depression: A Puzzle and Possible Resolution by Harold L. Cole and Lee E. Ohanian
The Great Depression in Canada and the United States: A Neoclassical Perspective by Pedro Amaral and James C. MacGee
The French Depression in the 1930s by Paul Beaudry and Franck Portier
The Role of Real Wages, Productivity, and Fiscal Policy in Germany's Great Depression, 1928-37 by Jonas D. M. Fisher and Andreas Hornstein
The Great Depression in Italy: Trade Restrictions and Real Wage Rigidities by Fabrizio Perri and Vincenzo Quadrini
Argentina's Lost Decade and the Subsequent Recover Puzzle by Finn E. Kydland and Carlos E. J. M. Zarazaga
A Decade Lost and Found: Mexico and Chile in the 1980s by Raphael Bergoeing, Patrick J. Kehoe, Timothy J. Kehoe, and Raimundo Soto
The 1990s in Japan: A Lost Decade by Fumio Hayashi and Edward C. Prescott
The Brazilian Depression in the 1980s and 1990s by Mirta S. Bugarin, Roberto Ellery Jr., Victor Gomes, and Arilton Teixeira
Tariffs and the Great Depression Revisited by Mario J. Crucini and James A. Kahn
Recent Great Depressions: Aggregate Growth in New Zealand and Switzerland by Timothy J. Kehoe and Kim J. Ruhl
What Can We Learn from the 1998-2002 Depression in Argentina? by Timothy J. Kehoe
Prosperity and Depression by Edward C. Prescott
Modeling Great Depressions: The Depression in Finland in the 1990s by Juan Carlos Conesa, Timothy J. Kehoe, and Kim J. Ruhl
-
Creator: Arellano, Cristina; Bai, Yan; and Bocola, Luigi Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 547 Abstract: This paper measures the output costs of sovereign risk by combining a sovereign debt model with firm- and bank-level data. An increase in sovereign risk lowers the price of government debt and has an adverse impact on banks’ balance sheets, disrupting their ability to finance firms. The resulting fall in credit supply impacts firms directly, as they need to borrow at higher interest rates, and indirectly through general equilibrium effects on the price of inputs and other goods. Importantly, firms are not equally affected by these developments: those that have greater financing needs and that borrow from banks that hold more government debt are mostly affected by the change in borrowing rates, while firms that do not borrow are only impacted indirectly. We show that these direct and indirect effects can be recovered using a firm-level regression, which we estimate using Italian data. We calibrate our model to match the measured firm-level elasticities and find that heightened sovereign risk was responsible for one-third of the observed output decline during the Italian debt crisis.
Keyword: Micro-to-macro, Credit crunch, and Sovereign debt crisis Subject (JEL): E44 - Financial Markets and the Macroeconomy, F34 - International Lending and Debt Problems, G12 - Asset Pricing; Trading Volume; Bond Interest Rates, and G15 - International Financial Markets -
Creator: Mongey, Simon and Waugh, Michael E. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 656 Abstract: This paper characterizes the allocations that emerge in general equilibrium economies populated by households with preferences of the additive random utility type that make discrete consumption, employment or spatial decisions. We start with a complete markets economy where households can trade claims contingent upon the realizations of their preference shocks. We (i) establish a first and second welfare theorem, (ii) illustrate that in the absence of ex-ante trade, discrete choice economies are generically inefficient, (iii) show that complete markets are not necessary and a much smaller set of securities decentralizes the efficient allocation. We illustrate the relevance of these results in several canonical settings and for measuring how welfare changes in response to changes in prices.
Keyword: Welfare, Discrete choice, and Complete markets Subject (JEL): R13 - General Equilibrium and Welfare Economic Analysis of Regional Economies, F10 - Trade: General, E20 - Consumption, Saving, Production, Investment, Labor Markets, and Informal Economy: General (includes Measurement and Data), and D52 - Incomplete Markets -
Creator: Blundell, Richard; Borella, Margherita; Commault, Jeanne; and De Nardi, Mariacristina Series: Institute working paper (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Opportunity and Inclusive Growth Institute) Number: 040 Abstract: In the U.S, after age 65, households face income and health risks and a large fraction of these risks are transitory. While consumption significantly responds to transitory income shocks, out-of-pocket medical expenses do not. In contrast, both consumption and out-of-pocket medical expenses respond to transitory health shocks. Thus, most U.S. elderly keep their out-of-pocket medical expenses close to a satiation point that varies with health. Consumption responds to health shocks mostly because adverse health shocks reduce the marginal utility of consumption. The effect of health on marginal utility changes the optimal transfers due to health shocks.
Subject (JEL): D12 - Consumer Economics: Empirical Analysis, H20 - Taxation, Subsidies, and Revenue: General, D10 - Household Behavior: General, H51 - National Government Expenditures and Health, D14 - Household Saving; Personal Finance, H31 - Fiscal Policies and Behavior of Economic Agents: Household, E20 - Consumption, Saving, Production, Investment, Labor Markets, and Informal Economy: General (includes Measurement and Data), D11 - Consumer Economics: Theory, and E21 - Macroeconomics: Consumption; Saving; Wealth -
Creator: Beaudry, Paul and Portier, Franck Description: Chapter 5 of Great Depressions of the Twentieth Century, Timothy J. Kehoe and Edward C. Prescott, eds.
-
Creator: Weber, Warren E. Description: Some of the downloadable Excel files that follow use Pre-1900 dates that Excel does not natively handle. We wrote an Add-In to overcome this limitation. Download the Pre-1900 Date Functions Add-In, copy it to C:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\Office10\Library (for Microsoft Office XP). Then open Excel, go to Tools Add-Ins and check the corresponding box.
-
Working Papers
CollectionDescription: Working Papers are early drafts of academic research papers written by economists affiliated with the Minneapolis Fed. Working Papers are often preprints of articles that are published in scholarly journals. Many Working Papers later become Staff Reports. The Research Database is the official location for this series, but you can also find them on the Minneapolis Fed website, IDEAS/RePEc, and in EconLit.
-
Staff Reports
CollectionDescription: Staff Reports are a series of academic research papers written by economists affiliated with the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Staff Reports are often preprints of articles that are later published in scholarly journals. The Research Database is the official location for this series, but you can also find them on the Minneapolis Fed website, IDEAS/RePEc, and in EconLit.
-
Conference Proceedings Archive
CollectionDescription: The Conference Proceedings collection houses papers and ephemera from twenty eight conferences hosted by the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Research Department between 1994 and 2003. Additional papers from other Minneapolis Research Department conferences can be found at the Minneapolis Fed conferences and programs website.
-
Creator: Estefan, Alejandro; Gerhard, Roberto; Kaboski, Joseph P.; Kondo, Illenin O.; and Qian, Wei Series: Institute working paper (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Opportunity and Inclusive Growth Institute) Number: 084 Abstract: A weakening of labor protection policies is often invoked as one cause of observed monopsony power and the decline in labor’s share of income, but little evidence exists on the causal impact of labor policies on wage markdowns. Using confidential Mexican economic census data from 1994 to 2019, we document a rising trend over this period in on-site outsourcing. Then, leveraging data from a manufacturing panel survey from 2013 to 2023 and a natural experiment featuring a ban on domestic outsourcing in 2021, we show that the ban drastically reduced outsourcing, increased wages, and reduced measured markdowns without lowering output or employment. Consistent with the presence of monopsony power, we observe large markdowns for the largest firms, with the decline in markdowns in response to the ban concentrated among high-markdown firms. However, we also find that the reform reduced capital investment and increased the probability of market exit.
Keyword: Markdowns, Outsourcing, Monopsony, and Developing countries Subject (JEL): J38 - Wages, Compensation, and Labor Costs: Public Policy, O15 - Economic Development: Human Resources; Human Development; Income Distribution; Migration, J81 - Labor Standards: Working Conditions, M55 - Personnel Economics: Labor Contracting Devices, and J42 - Monopsony; Segmented Labor Markets