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488 records from EconBiz based on author Name
1. A decade of crisis in the euro area : how can one reconcile price stability with a monetary backstop for government debt?
Jeanne, Olivier;2023
Type: Aufsatz im Buch; Book section;
Availability: Link
2. Global financial cycle and liquidity management
Jeanne, Olivier; Sandri, Damiano;2023
Type: Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature; Arbeitspapier; Working Paper;
Availability:

3. From Fiscal Deadlock to Financial Repression : Anatomy of a Fall
abstractFinancial repression can be used to avoid a government default when fiscal policy is constrained. We present a model showing that optimal financial repression progresses through successive stages with increasing levels of distortion. Data from advanced economies suggest that the initial stage of financial repression typically begins when government debt exceeds 100% to 120% of GDP. Moreover, Japan's experience suggests that countries such as the U.S. have significant leeway before resorting to the most distortive forms of financial repression
Jeanne, Olivier;2025
Type: Arbeitspapier; Working Paper; Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature;
Availability: Link Link
4. To what extent are tariffs offset by exchange rates?
Jeanne, Olivier; Son, Jeongwon;2024
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability:

5. Currency Wars, Trade Wars, and Global Demand
abstractThis paper presents a tractable model of a global economy in which countries can use a broad range of policy instruments---the nominal interest rate, taxes on imports and exports, taxes on capital flows or foreign exchange interventions. Low demand may lead to unemployment because of downward nominal wage stickiness. Markov perfect equilibria with and without international cooperation are characterized in closed form. The welfare costs of trade and currency wars crucially depend on the state of global demand and on the policy instruments that are used by national policymakers. Countries have more incentives to deviate from free trade when global demand is low. Trade wars lower employment if they involve tariffs on imports but raise employment if they involve export subsidies. Tariff wars can lead to self-fulfilling global liquidity traps
Jeanne, Olivier;2021
Type: Arbeitspapier; Working Paper; Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature;
Availability: Link Link
Citations: 1 (based on OpenCitations)
6. To What Extent are Tariffs Offset by Exchange Rates?
abstractIn theory, we should expect tariffs to be partially offset by a currency appreciation in the tariff-imposing country or by a depreciation in the country on which the tariff is imposed. We find, based on a calibrated model, that the tariffs imposed by the US in 2018-19 should not have had a large impact on the dollar but may have significantly depreciated the renminbi. This prediction is consistent with a high-frequency event analysis looking at the impact of tariff-related news on the dollar and the renminbi. We find that tariffs explained at most one fifth of the dollar effective appreciation but around two thirds of the renminbi effective depreciation observed in 2018-19
Jeanne, Olivier; Son, Jeongwon;2023
Availability: Link
7. Global financial cycle and liquidity management
Jeanne, Olivier; Sandri, Damiano;2023
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: Link
8. To What Extent Are Tariffs Offset By Exchange Rates?
abstractIn theory, we should expect tariffs to be partially offset by a currency appreciation in the tariff-imposing country or by a depreciation in the country on which the tariff is imposed. We find, based on a calibrated model, that the tariffs imposed by the US in 2018-19 should not have had a large impact on the dollar but may have significantly depreciated the renminbi. This prediction is consistent with a high-frequency event analysis looking at the impact of tariff-related news on the dollar and the renminbi. We find that tariffs explained at most one fifth of the dollar effective appreciation but around two thirds of the renminbi effective depreciation observed in 2018-19
Jeanne, Olivier; Son, Jeongwon;2020
Availability: Link Link
Citations: 2 (based on OpenCitations)
9. Global Financial Cycle and Liquidity Management
abstractWe use a tractable model to show that emerging markets can protect themselves from the global financial cycle by expanding (rather than restricting) capital flows. This involves accumulating reserves when global liquidity is high to buy back domestic assets at a discount when global financial conditions tighten. Since the private sector does not internalize how this buffering mechanism reduces international borrowing costs, a social planner increases the size of capital flows beyond the laissez-faire equilibrium. The model also provides a role for foreign exchange intervention in less financially developed countries. The main predictions of the model are consistent with the data
Jeanne, Olivier; Sandri, Damiano;2020
Availability: Link Link
Citations: 6 (based on OpenCitations)
10. To what extent are tariffs offset by exchange rates?
Jeanne, Olivier;2020
Type: Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature; Arbeitspapier; Working Paper;
Availability:
