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CLAE Working Papers
Working papers from the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas are preliminary drafts circulated
for professional comment.
2005
| 2004 | 2003
| 2002 | 2001
| 1999
2001 Working Papers
0701 (Economic Research Working
Paper 0110)
Are
Labor Markets Segmented in Argentina? A Semiparametric
Approach [PDF]
Sangeeta Pratap and Erwan Quintin
We use data from Argentina's
household survey to evaluate the hypothesis that informal
workers would expect higher wages in the formal sector.
Using various definitions of informal employment we
find that, on average, formal wages are higher than
informal wages. Parametric tests suggest that a formal
premium remains after controlling for individual and
establishment characteristics. However, this approach
suffers from several econometric problems, which we
address with semiparametric methods. The resulting formal
premium estimates prove either small and insignificant,
or negative. In other words, we find no evidence that
Argentina's labor markets are segmented along formal/informal
lines.
0601 (Economic Research Working
Paper 0109)
Limited
Enforcement and the Organization of Production [PDF]
Erwan Quintin
This paper describes a
dynamic, general equilibrium model designed to assess
whether contractual imperfections in the form of limited
enforcement can account for international differences
in the organization of production. In the model, limited
enforcement constrains some agents to operate establishments
below their optimal scale. As a result, economies where
contracts are enforced more efficiently tent to be richer
and emphasize large scale production. Calibrated simulations
of the model reveal that these effects can be large
and account for a sizeable part of the observed differences
in the size distribution of manufacturing establishments
between Mexico and the United States.
0501 (Economic Research Working
Paper 0108)
Banking
and Finance in Argentina in the Period 1900–35
[PDF]
Leonard Nakamura and Carlos E. J. M. Zarazaga
From 1900 to 1935, Argentina
evolved from an economy highly dependent on external,
primarily British, finance to one more nearly self-sufficient.
We examine the failure of domestic finance to adequately
fill the void left by the decline of London and the
breakdown of the world financial system in the interwar
period, when neither the Buenos Aires
Bolsa nor the private domestic banks developed
rapidly enough to fully replace British investors as
efficient channels for financing private investment.
One consequence is that Argentine investable funds were
increasingly concentrated in a single institution, the
Banco de la Nacion Argentina
(BNA), creating a lopsided financial structure that
was vulnerable to rent seeking and to authoritarian
capture. Nevertheless, several measures, including gold
reserves, interest rates, money supply, bank credit,
and the market capitalization of domestic corporations,
attest to the very high level of financial development
achieved by Argentina.
0401 (Economic Research Working
Paper 0107)
Argentina's
Lost Decade [PDF]
Finn E. Kydland and Carlos E. J. M. Zarazaga
Argentina suffered a great
depression in the 1980s that was as severe as the Great
Depression experienced in the United States and Germany
in the interwar period. Our paper examines this great
depression from the perspective of growth theory, taking
total factor productivity as exogenous. Overall, the
predictions of the model are encouraging for the view
that neoclassical growth theory can account for the
main growth features of Argentina's lost decade and
the subsequent recovery in the 1990s.
0301 (Economic Research Working
Paper 0106)
Did
NAFTA Really Cause Mexicos High Maquiladora
Growth? [PDF]
William C. Gruben
Although Mexico's maquiladora
or in-bond plant system is an important and well-recognized
component of Mexico–U.S. trade, the connection
between the acceleration in maquiladora
growth and NAFTA is less clearly understood. A broad
cross-section of maquiladora
observers—including journalists, political activists,
industry analysts, and professors—argue that Mexico's
maquiladoras have been strongly
influenced by NAFTA and have grown rapidly as a result.
There are reasons to wonder if these conjectures are
correct. I test for the contribution of NAFTA to fluctuations
in maquiladora employment and
find evidence that no such connection exists. Instead,
maquiladoras' post-NAFTA growth
is connected to changes in Mexican wages relative to
those in Asia and in the United States, and to fluctuations
in U.S. industrial production. Indeed, for every 1 percent
change in U.S. industrial production I find a change
in maquiladora employment of
between 1.2 percent and 1.3 percent. This connection
is consistent with declining maquiladora
employment in 2001, as U.S. industrial production has
fallen, but is not consistent with the NAFTA-caused-maquiladora
growth story typically found in newspapers and magazines.
0201 (Economic Research Working
Paper 0105)
Dollarization
and Monetary Unions: Implementation Guidelines [PDF]
Dolarización
y uniones monetarias: pautas de implementación
[PDF]
William C. Gruben, Mark A. Wynne, and Carlos E. J. M.
Zarazaga
0101 (Economic Research Working
Paper 0104)
Capital
Account Liberalization and Disinflation in the 1990s
[PDF]
William C. Gruben and Darryl McLeod
As a way of addressing
arguments in the literature (Rodrik, 1998) that the
act of capital account liberalization leads to inflation,
we present a simple theoretical model in which capital
account liberalization raises the absolute value of
the elasticity of money demand because agents have broader
money holding options than under a closed capital account.
The central bank maximizes seigniorage, balancing the
benefits of higher inflation against potential losses
of foreign currency reserves. The optimum seigniorage-maximizing
rate of inflation falls when capital controls are loosened,
as a result of the impact of liberalization on the elasticity
of money demand. In a series of OLS and instrumental
variables models that are heavily influenced by the
work of Romer (1993) on current account openness and
Grilli and Milesi-Ferretti (1995) on capital account
openness, we test the impact of the act capital account
liberalization (and many other factors) on inflation
and find results that are consistent with our simple
theoretical model and that are inconsistent with the
recent work of Rodrik (1998). |