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Do Mergers Lead to Monopoly in the Long Run? Results From the Dominant Firm Model
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Re-Examining the Contributions of Money and Banking Shocks to the U.S. Great Depression
2 of 100
Growth and Business Cycles
3 of 100
The Macroeconomics of Child Labor Regulation
4 of 100
Culture: An Empirical Investigation of Beliefs, Work, and Fertility
5 of 100
Societal Benefits of Nominal Bonds
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On the Desirability of Fiscal Constraints in a Monetary Union
7 of 100
Productivity and the Post-1990 U.S. Economy
8 of 100
IER Lawrence Klein Lecture: The Case Against Intellectual Monopoly
9 of 100
Endogenous Policy Choice: The Case of Pollution and Growth
10 of 100
How to Advance Theory with Structural VARs: Use the Sims-Cogley-Nason Approach
11 of 100
Modeling Inventories Over The Business Cycle
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Growth Cycles and Market Crashes
13 of 100
Why Do Americans Work So Much More Than Europeans?
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Money and Bonds: An Equivalence Theorem
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Using the General Equilibrium Growth Model to Study Great Depressions: A Reply to Temin
16 of 100
Does Neoclassical Theory Account for the Effects of Big Fiscal Shocks? Evidence From World War II
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Trend and Cycle in Bond Premia
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International Business Cycles With Endogenous Incomplete Markets
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Liquidity in Asset Markets with Search Frictions
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Can Sticky Price Models Generate Volatile and Persistent Real Exchange Rates?
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Methods versus Substance: Measuring the Effects of Technology Shocks on Hours
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Bankruptcy and Collateral in Debt Constrained Markets
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On the Equilibrium Concept for Overlapping Generations Organizations
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Taxation, Entrepreneurship, and Wealth
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Specialization and the Skill Premium in the 20th Century
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Quantitative Macroeconomics with Heterogeneous Households
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Modeling the Transition to a New Economy: Lessons from Two Technological Revolutions
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The Heterogeneous State of Modern Macroeconomics: A Reply to Solow
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A Unified Theory of the Evolution of International Income Levels
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Taxes, Regulations, and the Value of U.S. and U.K. Corporations
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Does Regulation Reduce Productivity? Evidence From Regulation of the U.S. Beet-Sugar Manufacturing Industry During the Sugar Acts, 1934-74
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A Parsimonious Macroeconomic Model for Asset Pricing
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Were U.S. State Banknotes Priced as Securities?
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Are Shocks to the Terms of Trade Shocks to Productivity?
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Privatization’s Impact on Private Productivity: The Case of Brazilian Iron Ore
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Predicting Turning Points
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A Theory of Factor Allocation and Plant Size
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What Can We Learn from the Current Crisis in Argentina?
39 of 100
Trade, Growth, and Convergence in a Dynamic Heckscher-Ohlin Model
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Comment on Gali and Rabanal's "Technology Shocks and Aggregate Fluctuations: How Well Does the RBC Model Fit Postwar U.S. Data?"
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Fertility and Social Security
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Household Heterogeneity and Real Exchange Rates
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Asset Prices and Liquidity in an Exchange Economy
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The Scale of Production in Technological Revolutions
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Sluggish Responses of Prices and Inflation to Monetary Shocks in an Inventory Model of Money Demand
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Deflation and Depression: Is There an Empirical Link?
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Perfectly Competitive Innovation
48 of 100
Understanding International Prices: Customers as Capital
49 of 100
Building Blocks for Barriers to Riches
50 of 100
Opportunity and Social Mobility
51 of 100
Inside and Outside Money
52 of 100
The Current Financial Crisis: What Should We Learn from the Great Depressions of the Twentieth Century?
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New Keynesian Models: Not Yet Useful for Policy Analysis
54 of 100
Innovating Firms and Aggregate Innovation
55 of 100
An Evaluation of the Performance of Applied General Equilibrium Models of the Impact of NAFTA
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Larger Crises, Slower Recoveries: The Asymmetric Effects of Financial Frictions
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Optimal Fiscal and Monetary Policy: Equivalence Results
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Real Exchange Rate Movements and the Relative Price of Non-Traded Goods
59 of 100
Does Income Inequality Lead to Consumption Equality? Evidence and Theory
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Non-Convexities in Quantitative General Equilibrium Studies of Business Cycles
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Factor Saving Innovation
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On the Need for a New Approach to Analyzing Monetary Policy
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Technology Capital and the U.S. Current Account
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If Exchange Rates Are Random Walks, Then Almost Everything We Say about Monetary Policy is Wrong
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Appendices: Technology Capital and the U.S. Current Account
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Technical Appendix: Unmeasured Investment and the Puzzling U.S. Boom in the 1990s
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The Home Market and the Pattern of Trade: Round Three
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Fragility of Reputation and Clustering of Risk-Taking
69 of 100
Search in Asset Markets
70 of 100
Urban Structure and Growth
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Habit Persistence, Asset Returns and the Business Cycle
72 of 100
Rewarding Sequential Innovators: Prizes, Patents and Buyouts
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What Determines Productivity? Lessons From the Dramatic Recovery of the U.S. and Canadian Iron Ore Industries Following Their Early 1980s Crisis
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A Quantitative Analysis of the Evolution of the U.S. Wage Distribution: 1970–2000
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Time Consistent Monetary Policy with Endogenous Price Rigidity
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The Advantage of Transparency in Monetary Policy Instruments
77 of 100
Why Did Productivity Fall So Much During the Great Depression?
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Learning from Failure
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Real Effects of Inflation Through the Redistribution of Nominal Wealth
80 of 100
Transportation and Development: Insights from the U.S., 1840–1860
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Nature or Nurture? Learning and Female Labor Force Dynamics
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Overturning Mundell: Fiscal Policy in a Monetary Union
83 of 100
Coin Sizes and Payments in Commodity Money Systems
84 of 100
Establishment Size Dynamics in the Aggregate Economy
85 of 100
Inventories and the Business Cycle: An Equilibrium Analysis of (S,s) Policies
86 of 100
The Time Consistency of Monetary and Fiscal Policies
87 of 100
Firm Dynamics and Financial Development
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Patrick Kehoe’s Comment on “Determinants of Business Cycle Comovement: A Robust Analysis” by Marianne Baxter and Michael Kouparitsaskehoe
89 of 100
The Economic Performance of Cartels: Evidence from the New Deal U.S. Sugar Manufacturing Cartel, 1934–74
90 of 100
Deflation and the International Great Depression: A Productivity Puzzle
91 of 100
Trade Theory and Trade Facts
92 of 100
Sophisticated Monetary Policies
93 of 100
Rent-Seeking and Innovation
94 of 100
The International Diversification Puzzle Is Not as Bad as You Think
95 of 100
Time-Varying Risk, Interest Rates, and Exchange Rates in General Equilibrium
96 of 100
Comparing Alternative Representations, Methodologies, and Decompositions in Business Cycle Accounting
97 of 100
Changes in the Distribution of Family Hours Worked Since 1950
98 of 100
Paths of Development for Early- and Late-Bloomers in a Dynamic Heckscher-Ohlin Model
99 of 100
Comment on Mendoza and Tesar’s “Why Hasn’t Tax Competition Triggered a Race to the Bottom? Some Quantitative Lessons from the EU”
100 of 100
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