[3.2] 이스라엘, 미국의 對이란 공습 및 이란의 보복 지속 등

국제금융센터 > 정기보고서

Improving Organ Procurement Operations -- by Hammaad Adam, Nikhil Agarwal, Marzyeh Ghassemi

We study how decisions made by organ procurement organizations (OPOs)—non-profits that coordinate organ recovery from deceased donors—affect the availability of organs for transplant in the United States. We develop a structural econometric model of a pivotal OPO decision: whether to approach a potential donor’s family to request authorization for donation. Our model conceptualizes this decision in two parts. The OPO first estimates the probabilities of two downstream outcomes: authorization (i.e., family consent) and transplant (i.e., whether the donated organs would be successfully transplanted). It then applies a cost-benefit decision rule that maps these estimates to an approach de..

NBER > Working Papers

Consumption Wedges: Measuring and Diagnosing Distortions -- by Sasha Indarte, Raymond Kluender, Ulrike Malmendier, Michael Stepner

Ample empirical evidence documents deviations from the canonical consumption-savings model; yet, it remains difficult to assess the roles of different underlying distortions, such as financial constraints and behavioral preferences. We develop a sufficient-statistics approach that measures individual-level wedges between observed and counterfactual “frictionless” consumption. Since different distortions imply different wedge properties, wedges provide a diagnostic to distinguish between models. We measure wedges using administrative transactions data linked to surveyed expectations for a population of middle-income, low-liquidity US consumers. The expectations data allow us to distinguis..

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Interest Rate Risk and Cross-Sectional Effects of Micro-Prudential Regulation -- by Juliane Begenau, Vadim Elenev, Tim Landvoigt

This paper investigates financial stability risks arising from banks' interest rate exposure and uninsured deposit funding. We develop a model of heterogeneous banks featuring endogenous run risk to jointly analyze portfolio and funding choices. The model replicates key empirical patterns, including the concentration of uninsured deposits in larger banks. We analyze the impact of monetary policy rate hikes and evaluate the capacity of microprudential tools to mitigate bank fragility. Results demonstrate that tightening capital requirements significantly lowers run risk. Higher liquidity requirements targeting uninsured deposits efficiently reduce run risk, provided they are met exclusively w..

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Ray of Hope? China and the Rise of Solar Energy -- by Ignacio Banares-Sanchez, Robin Burgess, Dávid László, Pol Simpson, John Van Reenen, Yifan Wang

Do industrial policies that promote clean energy offer a “ray of hope”, increasing a country’s growth and welfare, whilst simultaneously reducing carbon emissions? We study the impact of Chinese solar subsidies whose implementation by city-regions went alongside massive expansion of the sector and a dramatic fall in global solar prices. We construct new city and firm panel data on solar policies, patenting and output. Using synthetic-difference-in-differences 2004-2020, we find production and innovation subsidies were more effective than demand-side (installation) subsidies in generating large and persistent increases in local innovation, net entry, production and exports. Demand polic..

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Inflation vs Inclusion: Stabilization Policy in the Wake of the Pandemic -- by Felipe Alves, Giovanni L. Violante

As the economy emerges from a crisis, macroeconomic policy confronts a dilemma: a protracted stimulus can foster a more inclusive labor market recovery, yet risks igniting inflation that ultimately undermines workers’ welfare through real income erosion. This tension amplifies in the presence of the ZLB and aggregate capacity constraints. We embed this insight into a quantitative model of the US economy. We study how monetary and fiscal policies managed this inflation-inclusion trade-off after the pandemic, contrasting actual outcomes with counterfactual scenarios. Our experiments yield five findings: (i) the trade-off was unusually difficult because policy was squeezed between these two c..

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Minimum Wages and Rise of the Robots -- by Erik Brynjolfsson, J. Frank Li, Javier Miranda, Robert Seamans, Andrew J. Wang

This paper studies how minimum wage policy affects firms’ adoption of automation technologies. Using both state-level measures of robot exposure and novel plant-level data on industrial robot imports linked to U.S. Census microdata from 1992–2021, we show that increases in minimum wages raise the likelihood of robot adoption in manufacturing. Our preferred identification exploits discontinuities at state borders, comparing otherwise similar firms exposed to different wage floors. Across specifications, a 10 percent increase in the minimum wage increases robot adoption by roughly 8 percent relative to the mean.

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Are Macro Shocks Second Order? -- by Michail Anthropelos, Jasmina Hasanhodzic, Laurence J. Kotlikoff

This paper addresses two fundamental macroeconomics questions. First, are macro shocks large enough to alter the course of the economy? Second, are they large enough to materially impact economic welfare? Lucas and many others have addressed these issues, but do so primarily in the context of representative agent models. We study these questions using a large-scale, general equilibrium, stochastic, overlapping generations model. We consider 80 generations overlapping in an economy buffeted by realistically calibrated total factor productivity and capital depreciation shocks. The model is solved using Marcet’s projection method taking explicit account of the full state space, which comprise..

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Scanner Data, Product Churn and Quality Adjustment -- by W. Erwin Diewert, Chihiro Shimizu

High technology products are characterized by the rapid introduction of new models and the corresponding disappearance of older models. The paper addresses the problems associated with the construction of price indexes for these products. Several methods for the quality adjustment of product prices are considered: hedonic regressions that use either product characteristics (Time Dummy Characteristics regressions) or the product itself as the ultimate characteristic (Time Product Dummy regressions). The paper also considered regressions where the economic importance of products is taken into account (weighted versus unweighted regressions). The indexes which were generated by the hedonic regr..

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What Threshold Should be Applied to Tests of Factor Models? -- by Campbell R. Harvey, Alessio Sancetta, Yuqian Zhao

Researchers generally acknowledge that statistical tests must be adjusted when hundreds of factors and trading strategies have been examined. But how should these adjustments be made? Existing methods are often misunderstood or misapplied. We show that proper inference requires accounting for dependence across tests, correctly specifying the null distribution, and mitigating sample-selection bias. We develop a simple framework that avoids assumptions about the total number of tests run and yields a lower bound on valid significance thresholds - implying that researchers should employ a t-statistic cutoff of at least 3.0. In addition, we advocate using the local False Discovery Rate, which pr..

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Capital Structure, Seniority, and Risk Premia: Evidence from the London Stock Exchange, 1870–1929 -- by William N. Goetzmann, K. Geert Rouwenhorst

We use security-level data from the Investors Monthly Manual (IMM) to construct capital-weighted return indexes for the London Stock Exchange over the period 1870–1929. We find a significant and persistent equity risk premium of 3.7% over commercial paper and 4.5% over long-term government bonds, with significant co-movement with GDP growth. Returns decline monotonically with claim seniority: common stocks earn more than preferred shares, which earn more than corporate bonds. Both equity risk premia are highly significant, and the rolling 10-year return spread for stocks minus bonds is positive for every interval in the 60-year sample period.

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The Vietnam War and Racial Integration -- by Zachary Bleemer

The Vietnam draft conscripted hundreds of thousands of young Americans into an integrated military. I combine near-random draft lottery variation with administrative voter data to study the long-run racial integration effects of coerced national service. Black and Native American veterans became more likely to marry white spouses, identify as Republicans, and live in more-integrated neighborhoods. Improved economic standing may partly mediate these effects. Effects are larger for Southerners and are precisely null for white veterans. Coerced military service generates substantial but asymmetric cross-racial political convergence and racial integration: Vietnam-era service caused about 20 per..

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Did Foreigners Pay America's Tariffs? Quantity Discounts, Scale Economies and Incomplete Pass-Through -- by Sharat Ganapati, Colin J. Hottman

Transaction-level quantity discounts are a pervasive feature of US trade, shaping both price variation and tariff incidence. Using administrative microdata, we show that these discounts reflect transaction-level scale economies rather than market power. Accounting for these micro-level economies resolves a key puzzle: while observed import prices rose one-for-one with 2018-2019 US tariffs, we show this was driven by the loss of scale economies as transaction sizes collapsed. Controlling for this scale effect, the strategic pass-through of tariffs to scale-free prices falls to 60 percent, implying foreign exporters absorbed a significant share of the burden through reduced markups.

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Farmer Adoption and Payment Design Under Risk: Variability in Soil Carbon Sequestration Across Conservation Practices -- by Khyati Malik

Agricultural soils represent one of the largest underutilized opportunities for climate mitigation through land-based carbon sequestration. This study analyzes how farmers make long-term decisions about adopting soil conservation practices, such as no-till and reduced tillage, when soil organic carbon (SOC) accumulation generates additional payments, while explicitly considering risk associated with SOC sequestration variability. Using an infinite-horizon dynamic optimization model, the study quantifies the carbon payment levels required to incentivize adoption across different soil types. Results show that the required payments vary widely, from $8/ton C/year on well-drained soils to $32/to..

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Bubbles, Booms and Crashes in the US Stock Market 1792-2024 -- by William N. Goetzmann, Otto Manninen, James Tyler

We examine the historical frequency of stock market booms, crashes, and bubbles in the United States from 1792 to 2024 using aggregate market data and industry-level portfolios. We define a bubble as a large boom followed by a crash that reverses the market’s prior gains. Bubbles are extremely rare. We extend the industry-level analysis of Greenwood, Shleifer, and You (2019) through 2024 and replicate their findings out of sample using Cowles Commission industry data from 1871 to 1938. Booms do not reliably predict crashes, but they do predict higher subsequent volatility, increasing the likelihood of both large gains and large losses.

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An Empirical Evaluation of Some Long-Horizon Macroeconomic Forecasts -- by Kurt G. Lunsford, Kenneth D. West

We use long-run annual cross-country data for 10 macroeconomic variables to evaluate the long-horizon forecast distributions of six forecasting models. The variables we use range from ones having little serial correlation to ones having persistence consistent with unit roots. Our forecasting models include simple time series models and frequency domain models developed in Müller and Watson (2016). For plausibly stationary variables, an AR(1) model and a frequency domain model that does not require the user to take a stand on the order of integration appear reasonably well calibrated for forecast horizons of 10 and 25 years. For plausibly non-stationary variables, a random walk model appears..

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When Benchmarks Fail: The Causes and Consequences of Negative Oil Prices -- by Erik P. Gilje, Robert C. Ready, Nikolai Roussanov, Jérôme P. Taillard

On April 20, 2020, the crude oil benchmark in North America, the West Texas Intermediate (WTI) futures contract for delivery in Cushing, Oklahoma, settled below zero for the first time in history. We combine new empirical evidence with a stylized theoretical model to show that a key catalyst was the accumulation of unusually large long positions in the expiring contract held by uninformed financial traders unable to take physical delivery. These positions distorted the demand signal in the futures market, intensifying pressure on the limited storage capacity and precipitating a sharp price dislocation. We then document that this dislocation significantly influenced oil production decisions t..

NBER > Working Papers

Equity Financing and Exports: Evidence from IPO Approvals in China -- by Robin Kaiji Gong, Yao Amber Li, Stephen Teng Sun, Shang-Jin Wei

While finance theory distinguishes the roles of equity and debt in supporting firm growth, their differential impacts on international trade remain underexplored. This study provides the first empirical analysis of how access to equity financing affects firm exports. We leverage the unique institutional setting in China, where initial public offerings (IPOs) require stringent regulatory approval, ensuring that only qualified firms advance to the final review stage. Our empirical strategy compares the export performance of successful IPO applicants with that of “near misses"—applicants rejected at the final review meetings. To sharpen identification, we utilize meeting records to exclude ..

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Efficiency, Insurance, and Redistribution Effects of Government Policies -- by Anmol Bhandari, David Evans, Mikhail Golosov, Thomas J. Sargent

This paper decomposes welfare measures of policy reforms into parts attributable to redistribution and parts due to efficiency. We further decompose efficiency into subcomponents such as gains from better insurance against idiosyncratic and aggregate risk. Our decomposition of welfare measures associated with alternative feasible allocations is cast in terms of a coordinate system that uses generalized Pareto–Negishi weights to capture inequality and production and consumption wedges to capture distortions. Our decomposition has several desirable properties. It attributes welfare changes from movements along a Pareto frontier to redistribution; it attributes negative efficiency changes to ..

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Geoeconomic Competition and Capital Reallocation in Global FX Funding -- by Yu An, Amy W. Huber

We study geoeconomic competition and capital reallocation in global financial markets, using the foreign exchange (FX) funding market as our empirical setting. FX funding, obtained by borrowing one currency while pledging another through FX swaps, is instrumental to cross-border investment and provides high-frequency measures of capital reallocation. Countries compete for FX funding through policy actions that shift investment returns or funding costs, thereby inducing global portfolio rebalancing by private investors. We quantify this competition by measuring how one country’s inflow responds to another country’s actions, which we call “reallocation exposure.” Because observed fundi..

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Multidimensional Signaling and the Rise of Cultural Politics -- by Daron Acemoglu, Georgy Egorov, Konstantin Sonin

In turbulent times, political labels become increasingly uninformative about politicians’ true policy preferences or their ability to withstand the influence of special interest groups. We offer a model in which politicians use campaign rhetoric to signal their political preferences in multiple dimensions. In equilibrium, the less popular types try to pool with the more popular ones, whereas the more popular types seek to separate themselves. The ability of voters to process information shapes politicians’ campaign rhetoric. If the signals on the cultural dimension are more precise, politicians signal more there, even if the economy is more important to voters. The unpopular type benefit..

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AI, Human Cognition and Knowledge Collapse -- by Daron Acemoglu, Dingwen Kong, Asuman Ozdaglar

We study how generative AI, and in particular agentic AI, shapes human learning incentives and the long-run evolution of society’s information ecosystem. We build a dynamic model of learning and decision-making in which successful decisions require combining shared, community-level general knowledge with individual-level, context-specific knowledge; these two inputs are complements. Learning exhibits economies of scope: costly human effort jointly produces a private signal about their own context and a “thin” public signal that accumulates into the community’s stock of general knowledge, generating a learning externality. Agentic AI delivers context-specific recommendations that subs..

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How Do Interest Rates Affect Consumption? Household Debt and the Role of Asset Prices -- by Angus K. Foulis, Jonathon Hazell, Atif R. Mian, Belinda Tracey

This paper estimates how rate cuts increase consumption, via debt and asset prices. Using administrative UK data on mortgages and consumption, we exploit the expiry of fixed-rate mortgages to construct six million household-level natural experiments. A 1pp reduction in mortgage rates raises consumption by 3% in the following 6 months. Using plausibly exogenous variation in how house prices respond to rate cuts, we show that consumption increases mostly because households borrow against higher house prices; lower debt service after rate cuts matters less. These results suggest that in large part, monetary policy affects consumption through asset prices and borrowing

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Online Buddies for Job Seekers: A Field Experiment -- by Bart K. de Koning, Paul Muller, Michèle Belot, Yvonne Engels, Didier Fouarge, Mario Keer, Philipp Kircher, Sandra Phlippen

We design an online platform to connect unemployed job seekers with ‘buddies’: former job seekers who recently found employment. We focus on job seekers who search in occupations with poor prospects and buddies who successfully switched occupations. In a randomized controlled trial, we evaluate the impact of access to the platform on labor market outcomes. We find sizable effects. Thirteen to 18 months after getting access, initially unemployed job seekers are 6 percentage points (11%) more likely to be employed and earn e 226 more per month than those without access. The positive impact is concentrated among the long-term unemployed.

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Understanding High Schools’ Effects on Longer-Term Outcomes -- by Preeya P. Mbekeani, John P. Papay, Ann Mantil, Richard J. Murnane

Improving education and labor market outcomes for low-income students is critical for advancing socioeconomic mobility in the United States. We use longitudinal data on five cohorts of 9th grade students to explore how Massachusetts public high schools affect the longer-term outcomes of students, with a special focus on students from low-income families. Using detailed administrative and student survey data, we estimate school value-added impacts on college outcomes and earnings. Observationally similar students who attend a school at the 80th percentile of the value-added distribution instead of a school at the 20th percentile are 11% more likely to enroll in college, are 31% more likely to..

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Loneliness, Mental Health and the Work-From-Home Revolution -- by Benjamin W. Cowan, Joe M. Spearing

The large increase in remote work since 2020 has prompted concerns about adverse effects on population loneliness and mental health. We show that any such adverse effects were small, in a UK context. We use data from UKHLS and differences-in-differences estimators that flexibly control for a rich set of covariates to compare changes in key variables amongst two groups: those who worked in teleworkable occupations in 2019, and those who worked in non-teleworkable occupations in 2019. While the former experience large and persistent increases in their probability of working remotely compared to the latter, any relative changes in self-reported loneliness or adverse mental health symptoms are t..

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The Economics of Tariffs -- by Ralph Ossa, Stephen J. Redding

A central insight from neoclassical economics is that international trade operates like an improvement in production technology. It generates mutual aggregate welfare gains for countries as a whole, but creates winners and losers within countries. Tariffs are a tax on this trading technology and distort the prices faced by domestic consumers and producers. Large countries can use tariffs to improve their terms of trade on world markets. But if all countries try to do so, they can end up with lower welfare than if they cooperated to liberalize trade. Tariffs can be used to redistribute income between the winners and losers from trade within countries. But there can be other more efficient way..

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