Recent Developments in Monetary Macroeconomics
Workshop held November 6-8, 2002
Papers Presented
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Implications of Adaptive Learning for Monetary Policy Design
George Evans, University of Oregon
Seppo Honkapohja, University of Helsinki
Discussants: John Duffy, University of Pittsburgh; Thomas Sargent, Stanford University -
Search, Money, and Capital: A Neoclassical Dichotomy
S. Boragan Aruoba, University of Pennsylvania
Randy Wright, University of Pennsylvania
Discussants: Peter Howitt, Brown University; Chris Waller, University of Kentucky -
The Great Depression: A Quantitative Evaluation of the Friedman and Schwartz Hypothesis
Larry Christiano, Northwestern University
Roberto Motto, European Central Bank
Massimo Rostagno, European Central Bank
Discussants: Michael Bordo, Rutgers University; Lee Ohanian, UCLA -
Putting "M" Back Into Monetary Policy: An Empirical Investigation
Eric Leeper, Indiana University
Jennifer Roush, Federal Reserve Board of Governors
Discussants: Martin Eichenbaum, Northwestern University; Frank Smets, European Central Bank -
What Do We Know about the Monetary Transmission Mechanism?
Ignazio Angeloni, European Central Bank
Anil Kashyap, University of Chicago
Benoit Mojon, European Central Bank
Daniele Terlizzese, Bank of Italy
Discussants: Richard Clarida, United States Treasury Department; Jesper Linde, Sveriges Riksbank -
Taking Intermediation Seriously
Bruce Smith, University of Texas
David Andolfatto, Simon Fraser University
Steve Williamson, University of Iowa -
Designing Monetary Policy: Backward-Looking Taylor-Wicksell Rules
Jess Benhabib, New York University
Stephanie Schmitt-Grohe, Rutgers University
Martin Uribe, University of Pennsylvania
Discussants: Charles Carlstrom, Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland; Dale Henderson, Federal Reserve Board of Governors -
How Forward-Looking Is Optimal Monetary Policy?
Marc Giannoni, Columbia University
Michael Woodford, Princeton University
Discussants: Timothy Fuerst, Bowling Green State University; Jeff Fuhrer, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
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