House of Finance (HoF)
Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Working Paper (674)
- Report (64)
- Part of Periodical (54)
- Article (20)
- Periodical (3)
- Contribution to a Periodical (2)
- Other (2)
- Book (1)
- Conference Proceeding (1)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (822)
Keywords
- Banking Union (17)
- monetary policy (13)
- regulation (12)
- systemic risk (10)
- COVID-19 (9)
- Covid-19 (9)
- ESG (9)
- bail-in (9)
- corporate governance (9)
- financial stability (9)
Institute
- House of Finance (HoF) (822)
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften (762)
- Center for Financial Studies (CFS) (727)
- Sustainable Architecture for Finance in Europe (SAFE) (695)
- Rechtswissenschaft (56)
- Foundation of Law and Finance (45)
- Institute for Monetary and Financial Stability (IMFS) (13)
- Frankfurt MathFinance Institute (FMFI) (2)
- Präsidium (2)
- E-Finance Lab e.V. (1)
0 Home ; 1 Editorial ; 2 Do Information Rents in Loan Spreads Persist over the Business Cycle? ; 3 Regulation of Executive Pay in Germany - Perspectives of Optimal Contracting and Managerial Power ; 4 Linking Customer and Financial Metrics to Shareholder Value ; 5 Policy Platform: Recommendations for the Regulation of Shadow Banking ; 6 INTERVIEW – Lars-Hendrik Röller: "Theory Needs to Address the Right Kind of Policy Questions" ; 7 News ; 8 Selected Research and Policy Publications
Editorial : Andreas Dombret "Regulating Systemically Important Financial Institutions is Vitally Important" ; Research Money/Macro : Dimitris Christelis, Dimitris Georgarakos, Michael Haliassos "International Portfolio Differences: Environment versus Characteristics" ; Research Finance : Raimond Maurer, Ralph Rogalla, Yuanyuan Shen "Optimal Asset Allocation in Retirement with Open-end Real Estate Funds" ; Research Law : Theodor Baums "Shareholder Suits in German Company Law – An Empirical Study" ; Policy Platform : Helmut Siekmann, Patrick Tuschl "Constitutional Ruling on Court of Auditors' Review of Banks" ; Interview : Michael S. Barr "Information Does not Necessarily Lead to Understanding"
I evaluate the effect of inflation targeting on inflation and how it interacts with product market deregulation during the disinflationary process in the 1990s. Using a sample of 21 OECD countries, I show that, after controlling for product market deregulation, the effect of inflation targeting is quantitatively important and statistically significant. Moreover, product market deregulation also matters in particular in countries that adopted an inflation targeting regime. I propose a New Keynesian Phillips curve with an explicit role for market deregulation to rationalize the empirical evidence.
The lessons from QE and other 'unconventional' monetary policies - evidence from the Bank of England
(2011)
This paper investigates the effectiveness of the ‘quantitative easing’ policy, as implemented by the Bank of England in March 2009. Similar policies had been previously implemented in Japan, the U.S. and the Eurozone. The effectiveness is measured by the impact of Bank of England policies (including, but not limited to QE) on nominal GDP growth – the declared goal of the policy, according to the Bank of England. Unlike the majority of the literature on the topic, the general-to-specific econometric modeling methodology (a.k.a. the ‘Hendry’ or ‘LSE’ methodology) is employed for this purpose. The empirical analysis indicates that QE as defined and announced in March 2009 had no apparent effect on the UK economy. Meanwhile, it is found that a policy of ‘quantitative easing’ defined in the original sense of the term (Werner, 1994) is supported by empirical evidence: a stable relationship between a lending aggregate (disaggregated M4 lending, i.e. bank credit for GDP transactions) and nominal GDP is found. The findings imply that BoE policy should more directly target the growth of bank credit for GDP-transactions.
Editorial: Jens Weidmann : "Central Banks and Monetary Policy after the Crisis" Research Finance: Holger Kraft,Claus Munk : "Optimal Housing, Consumption, and Investment Decisions over the Life Cycle" Research Money/Macro: Ester Faia, Eleni Iliopulos : "Financial Globalization and Monetary Policy" Research Law: Andreas Cahn, D. Schöneberger : "Shareholder Governance in Europe" Policy Platform: Michael Haliassos, Dimitri Vayanos : "Getting Greece Back on Track: How?" Interview: Raimond Maurer, Ralph Rogalla : "Longevity Risk and Capital Markets Solutions"
Editorial: Jürgen Stark : The ECB's Chief Economist about inflation targeting, liquidity support and the sovereign debt crisis Research Finance: Yulia Plyakha, Raman Uppal, Grigory Vilkov : "Why Does the Equally Weighted Portfolio Outperform the Value and Price Weighted Portfolios?" Research Law: Manfred Wandt : "Legal Objectives of the Solvency II Framework Directive" Research E-Finance: Roman Beck, Timm Pintner, Martin Wolf : "Individual Mindfulness to Mitigate Information Overload within Financial Organizations" Policy Platform: Peter Gomber, Björn Arndt, Marco Lutat, Tim Uhle : "Regulation of High-Frequency Trading – A European Perspective" Interview: Norbert Walter : "The Risko of Compromising on Price Stability Must not be Taken"
Editorial: Michael Heise : The Chief Economist of Allianz SE about the economic outlook for 2011 Research Finance: Andreas Hackethal, Utpal Bhattacharya, Benjamin Loos, Simon Kaesler, Steffen Meyer : "Unbiased Financial Advice – Wanted but not Followed" Research Law: Katja Langenbucher : "Insider Trading in Europe" Research Money/Macro: Thomas Laubach, Michael U. Krause, Matthias Hoffmann : "Long-Run Growth Expectations and Current Account Balances" Policy Platform: Heinz Hilgert, Jan Pieter Krahnen, Günther Merl, Helmut Siekmann : "Proposal for a Reorganisation of the German Landesbanks and Savings Banks Sector" Interview: Viral V. Acharya : "The Dodd-Frank Act Leaves a Lot to be Desired"
House of Finance
(2010)
In my dissertation I study the transmission of monetary and fiscal policy in New Keynesian DSGE models. In the first chapter we revisit the exchange rate channel in a two-country model of the U.S. and a panel of industrialized countries to analyse how monetary policy transmission in the U.S. changes if it becomes more trade integrated. We find that more openness lowers the sacrifice ratio, although the effect is quantitatively small and depends on the pricing of the firms. In the second chapter we simulate the impact of the U.S. fiscal stimulus package in 2009 on GDP. We find that the government spendingmultiplier is well below 1. The finding is robust to including rule-of-thumb consumers and simulating the stimulus in the recent recession. In the third chapter we collect the fiscal stimulus measures in the eleven biggest countries of the euro area. Then we do a robustness study by simulating the european package in five different models of the euro area. The macroeconomic models vary in terms of backward-looking decision making of the agents and openness. Our findings provide no support for a Keynesian multiplier. Instead they suggest that additional government spending will reduce private spending for consumption and investment purposes. If government spending faces an implementation lag, the initial effect on GDP may even be negative. In the fourth chapter I estimate a DSGE model for Germany and compute forecasts for the debt-to-GDP ratio. I find that the expected economic recovery will lead to a decrease in Germany’s indebtedness in the medium-term given that policy makers stick to the fiscal policy rules.
House of Finance
(2008)
This paper addresses the question whether close borrower-lender relationships, so called hausbank-relationships, facilitate the funding and beneficial development of SME. To this end, we derive a model which relates a firm's growth rate to its need for external funds and subsequently compute the firms that exceed their predicted growth rate. We then use this measure to identify specific characteristics that are associated with long- and short-term financing of firm growth, in particular the influence of relationship lending. We find that close ties with savings banks predict firms' access to external finance to fund growth. Moreover, the long-term liabilities of firms with hausbank-relationships almost double those with multiple relationships while the overall leverage is about the same. In turn, we find an strong empirical relationship between the provision of long-term funds and firm growth. Keywords: small business lending, credit access, public banks JEL Classifications: G21, D21