Economics – Wayne Marr

Entries from April 2009

Nava Ashraf: 04-30-09 Economist of the Day

April 29, 2009 · Leave a Comment

We choose Nava Ashraf as the Economist of the Day. Nava Ashraf is an Assistant Professor in the Negotiations, Organizations, and Markets Unit at Harvard Business School.

Nada Ashraf

Nada Ashraf

Contact Information

nashraf(at)hbs.edu

Short Biography

Nava Ashraf is an Assistant Professor in the Negotiations, Organizations, and Markets Unit at Harvard Business School. Professor Ashraf received her Ph.D. in Economics from Harvard University in 2005, and her BA in Economics and International Relations from Stanford University.

Professor Ashraf’s research combines psychology and economics, using both lab and field experiments to test insights from behavioral economics in the context of development projects in the Philippines, Kenya and Zambia. Her experiments address behavior change in health, agricultural production, and microfinance. She has conducted research on questions of intra-household conflict and bargaining in decisions related to finance and fertility, with a special focus on women’s empowerment. Her research is published or forthcoming in leading journals including the American Economic Review, the Quarterly Journal of Economics and the Journal of Economic Perspectives.

Professor Ashraf teaches in the first year required MBA course in Negotiations, and in the Executive Education program of the HBS Social Enterprise Initiative, where she teaches Impact Evaluation and Performance Measurement for Nonprofit Management.  She is a Faculty Affiliate of the Jameel Poverty Action Lab at MIT, dedicated to the use of randomized trials as a tool for learning what works in international development, and a Fellow of the National Bureau of Economic Research. Prior to joining HBS, she worked at the World Bank on trade negotiations between Morocco and the European Union, as a consultant for several nonprofit organizations in developing countries, and as founder of a business skills training institute for women in west Africa.

She has been awarded a Queen’s Jubilee Medal for service by the Government of Canada, and is the youngest person ever to receive the Order of British Columbia. In her spare time, she enjoys opera, dancing, and skiing.

Learn more about Professor Ashraf’s research in a recent Harvard magazine cover article. Please contact Kathleen Noddin at knoddin@hbs.edu or 617.495.666 for additional information.
Curriculum Vitae

Teaching

Nava Ashraf

Nava Ashraf

Field Experiments (Econ 2041/HBS 4430)

Rangan, V. Kasturi, Nava Ashraf, and Marie Bell. “PSI: Social Marketing Clean Water.” Harvard Business School Case 507-052.

Selected Research

Ashraf, Nava, Xavier Gine, and Dean Karlan. “Finding Missing Markets (and a Disturbing Epilogue): Evidence from an Export Crop Adoption and Marketing Intervention in Kenya.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics (forthcoming).

Ashraf, Nava. “Spousal Control and Intra-Household Decision Making: An Experimental Study in the Philippines.” American Economic Review (forthcoming).

Ashraf, Nava, Iris Bohnet, and Nikita Piankov. “Decomposing Trust and Trustworthiness.” Experimental Economics 9, no. 3 (September 2006).

Ashraf, Nava, Dean Karlan, and Wesley Yin. “Tying Odysseus to the Mast: Evidence from a Commitment Savings Product in the Philippines.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 121, no. 2 (May 2006). (Winner of the 2006 TIAA-CREF Paul A. Samuelson Award Certificate of Excellence.)

Ashraf, Nava, Dean Karlan, and Wesley Yin. “Deposit Collectors.” Art. 5. Special Issue on Field Experiments. Advances in Economic Analysis & Policy 6, no. 2 (2006).

Ashraf, Nava, Colin Camerer, and George Loewenstein. “Adam Smith, Behavioral Economist.” Journal of Economic Perspectives 19, no. 3 (summer 2005). (Read an interview about this article in HBS Working Knowledge.)

Books Chapters

Ashraf, Nava, Margaret McMillan and Alix Peterson-Zwane. “My Policies or Yours: Do OECD Agricultural Policies Affect Poverty in Developing Countries?” In Globalization and Poverty, edited by Ann Harrison. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006. (Read the New York Times article citing this paper .)

Other Papers

Ashraf, Nava, Dean Karlan, and Wesley Yin. “Female Empowerment: Impact of a Commitment Savings Product in the Philippines.” Harvard Business School Working Paper, No. 09-100, March 2009. Abstract

Female “empowerment” has increasingly become a policy goal, both as an end to itself and as a means to achieving other development goals. Microfinance in particular has often been argued, but not without controversy, to be a tool for empowering women. Here, using a randomized controlled trial, we examine whether access to and marketing of an individually-held commitment savings product leads to an increase in female decision-making power within the household. We find positive impacts, particularly for women who have below median decision-making power in the baseline, and we find this leads to a shift towards female-oriented durables goods purchased in the household.

Ashraf, Nava, Erica Field, and Jean N. Lee. “Gender, Intrahousehold Decisionmaking, and the Demand for Children.” August 2007.

Ashraf, Nava, James Berry, and Jesse M. Shapiro. “Can Higher Prices Stimulate Product Use? Evidence from a Field Experiment in Zambia.” Harvard Business School Working Paper, No. 07-034, December 2006. (Revised June 2007, October 2008.) Abstract

The controversy over whether and how much to charge for health products in the developing world rests, in part, on whether higher prices can increase use, either by targeting distribution to high-use households (a screening effect), or by stimulating use psychologically through a sunk-cost effect. We develop a methodology for separating these two effects. We implement the methodology in a field experiment in Zambia using door-to-door marketing of a home water purification solution. We find that higher prices screen out those who use the product less. By contrast, we find no consistent evidence of sunk-cost effects.

Ashraf, Nava, Dean Karlan, and Wesley Yin. “SEED: A Commitment Savings Product in the Philippines.” 2004. (Policy Paper.)

Ashraf, Nava, Dean Karlan, and Wesley Yin. “Testing Savings Product Innovations Using an Experimental Methodology.” Asian Development Bank Technical Note Series, No. 8, 2003.

Ashraf, Nava, Nathalie Gons, Dean Karlan, and Wesley Yin. “A Review of Commitment Savings Products in Developing Countries.” Asian Development Bank Economics and Research Department Series, No. 45, 2003.

Categories: Economics
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Central Banking Pt 2: 04-29-09 Remarks, Speeches & Announcements

April 29, 2009 · Leave a Comment

28Apr/Chea Chanto: Opening remarks at the BIS Advanced Reserve Management workshop

Opening remarks by H.E. Chea Chanto, Governor of the National Bank of Cambodia, at the Advanced Reserve Management Workshop, Siem Reap, 21 April 2009.

28Apr/Radovan Jelasic: Effects of the financial crisis on Central and Eastern Europe

Speech by Mr Radovan Jelasic, Governor of the National Bank of Serbia, at the “Global Crisis in Europe and Central Asia” panel discussion of the IMF and WB Spring Meeting, Washington, 24 April 2009.

28Apr/Miguel Fernandez Ordonez: Taking of stock of the Toledo Pact

Testimony by Mr Miguel Fernandez Ordonez, Governor of the Bank of Spain, before the Non-Standing Committee for the Monitoring and Assessment of the Toledo Pact Agreements, Madrid, 15 April 2009.

28Apr/John Hurley: Comments on the financial crisis

Address by Mr John Hurley, Governor of the Central Bank & Financial Services Authority of Ireland, at a lunch meeting of EU Ambassadors to Ireland, Dublin, 27 April 2009.

28Apr/Jean-Claude Trichet: The financial crisis and our response so far

Keynote address by Mr Jean-Claude Trichet, President of the European Central Bank, at the Chatham House Global Financial Forum, New York, 27 April 2009.

28 Apr Speech Lorenzo Bini Smaghi: Conventional and unconventional monetary policy

29 Apr Interview Jean-Claude Trichet: Interview with Süddeutsche Zeitung

29 Apr Press release Results of the April 2009 bank lending survey for the euro area

28Apr/Provisional international banking statistics, fourth quarter 2008

After a relatively small change in total outstanding stocks in the third quarter, banks’ external claims shrank by 5.4% in the fourth quarter of 2008 ($1.8 trillion at constant exchange rates), to $ 31 trillion. This was the largest reduction ever recorded in a single quarter. Claims denominated in US dollars and yen were down by 6% and 15%, respectively, and claims vis-à-vis non-banks declined by 8%.

29Apr/Lorenzo Bini Smaghi: Conventional and unconventional monetary policy

Keynote lecture by Mr Lorenzo Bini Smaghi, Member of the Executive Board of the European Central Bank, at the International Center for Monetary and Banking Studies (ICMB), Geneva, 28 April 2009.

29Apr/Caleb M Fundanga: Moderating the impact of the global meltdown on the Zambian financial system

Speech by Dr Caleb M Fundanga, Governor of the Bank of Zambia, at the official opening of Standard Chartered Bank Zambia Limited Ody’s Excel Centre, Lusaka, 22 April 2009.

29Apr/Duvvuri Subbarao: Role and response of the IMFC in Bangladesh, Bhutan, India and Sri Lanka

Statement by Mr Duvvuri Subbarao, Governor of the Reserve Bank of India, as leader of the Indian Delegation to the International Monetary and Financial Committee, Washington DC, 25 April 2009.
Opening address by Mr Miguel Fernandez Ordonez, Governor of the Bank of Spain, of the XVI Financial Sector Meeting “Spanish financial institutions in the face of the new competitive scenario”, ABC-Deloitte Forum, Madrid, 21 April 2009

29Apr/Jean-Claude Trichet: Interview with Süddeutsche Zeitung

Interview with Mr Jean-Claude Trichet, President of the European Central Bank, and Süddeutsche Zeitung, conducted by Ms Helga Einecke and Mr Martin Hesse, published on 29 April 2009.

Categories: Banking
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Financial Markets & Strategy: 04-29-09 Wayne Marr’s Syllabus

April 29, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Students,

Here is my MBA class syllabi for next academic year. For other academics, if you have comments, please let me know. If you want to use the syllabus, you can. I will be posting to the Economics and Faculty Group as well. Note, most of the thanks go to Sheridan Titman,  U of  Texas Austin and Mark Grinblatt, UCLA

Wayne Marr’s Fall 2009 Financial Markets Strategy Syllabus

Categories: Teaching
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Central Banking Pt 1: 04-29-09 Remarks, Speeches & Annoucements

April 28, 2009 · Leave a Comment

27Apr/Philipp Hildebrand: Principles for sound compensation practices

Summary of a speech by Mr Philipp Hildebrand, Vice-Chairman of the Governing Board of the Swiss National Bank, at the Economic Outlook 2009 (Unternehmer NW-Schweiz), Basel, 23 April 2009.

27Apr/Caleb M Fundanga: Launch of Info-Zambia Bank student loan scheme

Remarks by Dr Caleb M Fundanga, Governor of the Bank of Zambia, at the launch of the Indo-Zambia Bank Student Loan Scheme, Mulungushi University, Kabwe, 21 April 2009.

27Apr/Nils Bernstein: Recent economic and financial developments in Denmark

Speech by Mr Nils Bernstein, Governor of the National Bank of Denmark, at the Annual Meeting of the Association of Danish Mortgage Banks, Copenhagen, 23 April 2009.

27Apr/Mark Carney: Summary of the latest Monetary Policy Report

Opening statement by Mr Mark Carney, Governor of the Bank of Canada, at a press conference following the release of the Monetary Policy Report, Ottawa, 23 April 2009.

Categories: Banking · Economics
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Matthew Rabin: 04-29-09 Economist of the Day, UC Berkeley

April 28, 2009 · Leave a Comment

We choose Matthew Rabin as our Economist of the Day. Matthew is the Edward G. and Nancy S. Jordan Professor of Economics at the University of California, Berkeley.

Matthew Rabin

Matthew Rabin - Bad Hair Day

In Matthew’s own word, the first picture of him is on a  “good  hair day.” The second picture is Matthew on a “good hair day.” I now know what to do to my website!

Contact Information

T: (510) 643-8622
rabin(at)econ.Berkeley.edu

Short Biography [Note, you will need to visit his website to find out more about Montana. Click here.]

Matthew Rabin is the Edward G. and Nancy S. Jordan Professor of Economics. He received his PhD from MIT in 1989, the same year he joined the Berkeley faculty as an assistant professor. He was promoted to full professor in 1999. He also is director of the Program in Psychological Economics. Professor Rabin is a member of the Russell Sage Foundation Behavioral Economics Roundtable and of the Program Committee, 8th World Congress of the Econometric Society. In 2000-2001 he held a visiting position at the London School of Economics as BP Amoco-LSE Centennial Professor, and in 2004 he was Taussig Research Professor at Harvard.

Professor Rabin’s honors include Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow; Graduate Economics Association, Outstanding Teaching Award; MacArthur Foundation Fellow (2001-2005); Econometric Society Fellow; John Bates Clark Medal from American Economic Association; Fellow of American Academy of Arts and Sciences; and the Joln von Neumann Award, Laszlo Rajk College, Budapest.

Matthew - Good Hair Day

Matthew - Good Hair Day

Teaching

Econ 219A, Foundations of Psychology and Economics

Book

Advances in Behavioral Economics
Edited by Colin F. Camerer, George Loewenstein, & Matthew Rabin

Selected Publications

Optimal Sin Taxes” (with Ted O’Donoghue), Journal of Public Economics, forthcoming.

A Model of Reference-Dependent Preferences” (with Botond Koszegi), Quarterly Journal of Economics, forthcoming.

Expressed Preferences and Behavior in Experimental Games” (with Gary Charness), Games and Economic Behavior 53(2): 151-169, November 2005

Cursed Equilibrium” (with Erik Eyster), Econometrica 73(5), 1623-1672, September 2005

Projection Bias in Predicting Future Utility” (with George Loewenstein and Ted O’Donoghue), Quarterly Journal of Economics, 118 (4), November 2003, 1209-1248.

The Nobel Memorial Prize for Daniel Kahneman” Scandanavian Journal of Economics, 105(2): 157-280, 2003

Studying Optimal Paternalism, Illustrated with a Model of Sin Taxes” (with Ted O’Donoghue), American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings 93(2), May 2003, 186-191.

Regulation for Conservatives: Behavioral Economics and the Case for “Asymmetric Paternalism”, (with Colin Camerer, Samuel Issacharoff, George Loewenstein, Ted O’Donoghue), University of Pennsylvania Law Review, Vol 151, No. 3, January 2003, 1211-1254

Self Awareness and Self Control” (with Ted O’Donoghue), to appear as a chapter in Roy Baumeister, George Loewenstein, and Daniel Read (eds.), Now or Later: Economic and Psychological Perspectives on Intertemporal Choice, Russell Sage Foundation Press, forthcoming.

Understanding Social Preferences with Simple Tests” (with Gary Charness), Quarterly Journal of Economics 117(3), August 2002, 817-869.

Inference by Believers in the Law of Small Numbers,” Quarterly Journal of Economics 117(3), August 2002, 775-816.

‘Defending Expected Utility Theory’ -Response” (with Richard Thaler), Journal of Economic Perspectives, Spring 2002, 229-230.

A Perspective on Psychology and Economics,” European Economic Review 46(4-5), May 2002, 657-685.

Anomalies: Risk Aversion” (with Richard Thaler), Journal of Economic Perspectives 15(1), Winter 2001, 219-232.

Choice and Procrastination” (with Ted O’Donoghue), Quarterly Journal of Economics, February 2001, 121-160.

Risky Behavior Among Youths: Some Issues from Behavioral Economics” (with Ted O’Donoghue), in Jon Gruber, editor, Youthful Risky Behavior: An Economic Perspective, University of Chicago Press and NBER, 2000.

Diminishing Marginal Utility of Wealth Cannot Explain Risk Aversion,” chapter in Choices, Values, and Frames, Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky, editors, New York: Cambridge University Press, 2000, 202-208.

The Economics of Immediate Gratification” (with Ted O’Donoghue), Journal of Behavioral Decision Making 13(2), 233-250, 2000.

Risk Aversion and Expected-Utility Theory: A Calibration Theorem,” Econometrica 68(5), 1281-1292, September 2000.

Choice Bracketing” (with Daniel Read and George Loewenstein), Journal of Risk and Uncertainty, 19(1-3), 171-197, December 1999.

Comment on `What Me Worry? A Psychological Perspective on Economic Aspects of Retirement,’ by George Loewenstein, Drazen Prelec, and Roberto Weber,” in Behavioral Dimensions of Retirement Economics, Henry Aaron, editor, The Brookings Institution, 1999.

Procrastination in Preparing for Retirement” (with Ted O’Donoghue), in Behavioral Dimensions of Retirement Economics, Henry Aaron, editor, The Brookings Institution, 1999.

Addiction and Self Control” (with Ted O’Donoghue), in Addiction: Entries and Exits, Jon Elster, editor, Russel Sage Foundation, 1999.

Incentives for Procrastinators” (with Ted O’Donoghue), Quarterly Journal of Economics 114(3), 769-816, August 1999.

Doing It Now or Later” (with Ted O’Donoghue), American Economic Review 89(1), 103-124, March 1999.

Loss Aversion in a Consumption-Savings Model” (with David Bowman and Deborah Minehart), Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization 38(2), 155-178, February 1999.

First Impressions Matter: A Model of Confirmatory Bias” (with Joel Schrag), Quarterly Journal of Economics 114(1), 37-82, February 1999.

Psychology and Economics,” Journal of Economic Literature, Vol. XXXVI, 11-46, March 1998. Abstract

Review of Arrow, K., Colombatto, E., Perlman, M. and Schmidt, C. (eds.), The Rational Foundations of Economic Behaviour, Macmillan Press Ltd, 1996,” Journal of Economic Literature 35(4), 2045-2046, December 1997.

Cheap Talk” (with Joseph Farrell), Journal of Economic Perspectives 10(3), 103-118, Summer 1996.

Deviations, Dynamics, and Equilibrium Refinements” (with Joel Sobel), Journal of Economic Theory 68(1), 1- 25, January 1996.

“Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky,” in Warren Samuels (ed.), American Economists of the Late Twentieth Century, Cheltehem, UK: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd, 1996, pp. 111-137.

A Model of Pre-Game Communication,”Journal of Economic Theory 63, 370-391, August 1994.

“Incorporating Behavioral Assumptions into Game Theory,” in James Friedman (ed.), Problems of Coordination in Economic Activity, Norwell, MA: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1994.

Cognitive Dissonance and Social Change,“Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization 23, 177-194, 1994.

Incorporating Fairness into Game Theory and Economics,“American Economic Review 83, 1281-1302, December 1993.

“Information and the Control of Productive Assets,”Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization 9, 51-75, April 1993.

“Communication between Rational Agents,”Journal of Economic Theory 51, 144-170, June 1990. (Corrigendum, 1992, Vol 58., pp. 110-1.)

“Trends in British Health Inequalities, 1931-1983 (with Julian Le Grand), in A.J. Culyer and Bengt Jonsson, editors,” Public and Private Health Services, Basil Blackwell, 1986.

Unpublished Research

Incentives and Self Control” (with Ted O’Donoghue), December 2005.

The Gambler’s and Hot-Hand Fallacies In a Dynamic-Inference Model” (with Dimitri Vayanos), December 2005.

Reference-Dependent Risk Attitudes” (with Botond Koszegi), November 2005.

Procrastination on Long-Term Projects” (with Ted O’Donoghue), February 2002.

Addiction and Present-Biased Preferences” (with Ted O’Donoghue), October 2000.

Projection Bias in Predicting Future Utility” (with George Loewenstein and Ted O’Donoghue), March 2000. Abstract

Bargaining Structure, Fairness, and Efficiency,” mimeo, June 1996. (Berkeley Department of Economics Working Paper). Abstract

Moral Preferences, Moral Constraints, and Self-Serving Biases,” Berkeley Department of Economics Working Paper No. 95-241, August 1995. Abstract

Fairness in Repeated Games,” Berkeley Department of Economics Working Paper No. 97-252, January 1997. Abstract

“Focal Points in Pre-Game Communication,” Berkeley Department of Economics Working Paper No. 91-179, September 1991. Abstract

Reneging and Renegotiation,” Berkeley Department of Economics Working Paper No. 91-163, April 1991. Abstract

Projects in Process

“Squaring Both Sides: An Essay on Methodology”

“Peak-Load Pricing During Hyperinflation”

“Reincarnation in An Overlapping-Generations Model”

“Total Insight Management: A Revolutionary New Approach to Academic Research”

Categories: Economics
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Susan C. Athey: 04-28-09 Economist of the Day, Harvard University

April 27, 2009 · Leave a Comment

We choose Susan C Athey as today’s Economist of the Day. Susan is a Professor of Economics at Harvard University.

Susan Athey

Susan Athey

Contact Information

athey(at)fas.harvard.edu
T: (617) 496-1939

Administrative assistant
Betsy Stuppard
T: 617-496-3165
stuppard(at)fas.harvard.edu

Short Biography

Susan Athey is Professor of Economics at Harvard University. Born in 1970, she received her bachelor’s degree at 20 from Duke University, her Ph.D. from Stanford at 24, and was voted tenure at M.I.T. and Stanford before her 30th birthday. After teaching at MIT for six years and Stanford for five years, she moved to Harvard in 2006.

Her research interests include mathematical methods and tools for theoretical modeling, auctions, industrial organization, econometric identification, and organizational design. Her recent theoretical work concerns dynamic games and contracts with hidden information; applications include collusion and competition among bidders at auctions, ongoing trading relationships among privately informed traders, and the question of how much discretion to give a privately informed central banker in setting monetary policy. Her recent empirical work has focused on the effects of the design of timber auctions on the types of bidders who participate, revenue, and the prevalence of collusion. She has also been studying econometric identification, asking in a number of different contexts whether it is possible to learn about economic primitives using a combination of data and theoretical models, when datasets are large. Applications include auctions, difference-in-difference models, and models of consumer choice. She has published numerous articles in the top economics journals.

At the age of 36, Professor Athey received the John Bates Clark Medal. The Clark Medal is awarded by the American Economic Association every other year to “that American economist under the age of forty who is adjudged to have made the most significant contribution to economic thought and knowledge.” In 2000, she received the Elaine Bennett research award, given every other year to an outstanding young woman in any field of economics. She has received continuous funding from the National Science Foundation since 1995, including a prestigious Career Development award. In addition, she received the Sloan Foundation Research Fellowship for 2000-2002. She was elected as a fellow of the Econometric Society in 2004, and she is a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research. She was a National Fellow at the Hoover Institution in 2000-2001, and in 2004-2005 was a fellow at the Center for Advanced Studies in Behavioral Science at Stanford.

She is the co-editor of the new American Economic Journals: Microeconomics published by the American Economic Association. She has served as an associate editor of several leading journals, including the American Economic Review, Review of Economic Studies, and the RAND Journal of Economics, as well as the National Science Foundation economics panel, and she currently serves as an associate editor for Econometrica, Theoretical Economics, and Quarterly Journal of Economics. She is a past co-editor of Journal of Economics and Management Strategy. She was the chair of the program committee for the 2006 North American Winter Meetings, and she has served on numerous committees for the Econometric Society, the American Economic Association, and the Committee for the Status of Women in the Economics Profession.

She is also a principal of Market Design, Inc., a firm composed of leading scholars in the area of auctions and market design that focuses on advising governments on auction design, and she is an academic affiliate of Bates White, LLC, as well as a senior consultant for Criterion Auctions, firms that support her policy work on market design. She worked as a consultant to the government of British Columbia in designing a market-based pricing system for government-owned timber, as part of a resolution to the softwood lumber trade dispute, and she has consulted on the design of timber markets for several other foreign governments.

She was born in Boston and grew up in Rockville, Maryland. As an undergraduate at Duke University, she completed three majors, in Economics, Mathematics, and Computer Science. She got her start in economics research as a sophomore, working on problems related to auctions with Professor Robert Marshall. She was involved in a number of activities as well: she served as treasurer of Chi Omega sorority and as president of the field hockey club.

At Stanford University’s Graduate School of Business, she received State Farm Dissertation Award and Stanford University Leiberman Fellowship, a university-wide dissertation fellowship. Upon graduation, her success on the academic job market was the subject of feature articles in the New York Times, the International Herald Tribune, and the Boston Globe. At MIT, she held the Castle Krob Career Development Chair. She received the undergraduate economics association teaching award. She spent 1997-1998 as a visiting assistant professor at Yale University. At Stanford, she held the Holbrook Working Chair.

Here is Annalise

Here is Annalise

She is married to Guido Imbens, who is also Professor of Economics at Harvard, and they have two children, Carleton (born in 2004) and Annalise (born in 2006). Her hobbies used to include running, biking, and roller-blading, but now her main interest outside of work is spending time with her family.

Teaching

This Year’s Courses

Economics 2056b, Market Design (Graduate Elective). Studies topics in market design, focusing on auctions, auction-based marketplaces and platform markets. Covers methods and results from theory, empirical work, econometrics and experiments, highlighting practical issues in real-world design.

Prior Years’ Courses

Professional Advice (Prospective Graduate Students, Negotiating Senior Faculty Job Offers)

Research

1. Dynamic and Repeated Games and Mechanisms

Paper Title Coauthors Citation Last Revised
Coming soon… “Dynamic Auctions with Persistent Private Information” Kyle Bagwell Working Paper In progress
Coming soon… “The Dynamics of Open Source Software” Glenn Ellison Working Paper January, 2006 (preliminary)
Coming soon… “A Theory of Community Formation and Social Hierarchy” Saumitra Jha Working Paper November, 2006.
Designing Efficient Mechanisms for Dynamic Bilateral Trading Games Ilya Segal American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings, May, 2007. January, 2007.
An Efficient Dynamic Mechanism Ilya Segal Working Paper February, 2007. This is a major revision over the last version.
Collusion with Persistent Cost Shocks“”Supplementary Material Kyle Bagwell Econometrica, Vol. 76, No. 3 (May, 2008), 493–540. July, 2006!
Efficiency in Repeated Trade with Hidden Valuations David Miller Theoretical Economics, Volume 2, Number 3 (September 2007), 299–354. June, 2006
The Optimal Degree of Monetary Policy Discretion Andrew Atkeson, Patrick Kehoe Econometrica 73 (5), September, 2005, 1431-1476.
Collusion and Price Rigidity. Kyle Bagwell, Chris Sanchirico Review of Economic Studies 71 (2), April 2004. 1998 version: MIT Working Paper 98-23
Optimal Collusion with Private Information.” Kyle Bagwell RAND Journal of Economics September 2001, 32 (3): 428-465. MIT Working Paper 99-12.
Investment and Market Dominance.” Armin Schmutzler RAND Journal of Economics 32 (1), Spring 2001: 1-26.
Mentoring and Diversity Chris Avery and Peter Zemsky American Economic Review 90 (4) September 2000: 765-786. October1998 version (includes labor market model).

2. Auctions (Theory, Empirical, and Econometrics)

Paper Title Coauthors Working Paper Number Last Revised
Skewed Bidding in Pay Per Action Auctions for Online Advertising Nikhil Agarwal, David Yang To appear, American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings, May 2009.
Position Auctions with Consumer Search Glenn Ellison Working Paper September 2007
Coming soon… “Dynamic Auctions with Persistent Private Information” Kyle Bagwell Working Paper In progress
Coming soon… “Set-Asides and Subsidies in Auctions” Jonathan Levin Working Paper In progress
Empirical Models of Auctions Phil Haile Invited lecture prepared for the Ninth World Congress of the Econometric Society, London March, 2006
Collusion with Persistent Cost Shocks“”Supplementary Material Kyle Bagwell Econometrica, Vol. 76, No. 3 (May, 2008), 493–540. July, 2006!
Collusion with Persistent Cost Shocks Kyle Bagwell Working Paper July, 2004
Comparing Open and Sealed Bid Auctions: Theory and Evidence from Timber Auctions Jonathan Levin Working Paper September, 2004
Nonparametric Approaches to Auctions Philip Haile Handbook of Econometrics, Volume 6, Forthcoming.
Collusion and Price Rigidity. Kyle Bagwell, Chris Sanchirico Review of Economic Studies 71 (2), April 2004. 1998 version: MIT Working Paper 98-23
“Identification in Standard Auction Models” (Sept. 2001 version) Philip Haile Econometrica, 70 (6), November 2002, pp. 2107-2140. August, 2000.
Single Crossing Properties and the Existence of Pure Strategy Equlibria in Games of Incomplete Information.” Econometrica 69 (4) July 2001: 861-890. The July 1997 version has numerical analysis of asymmetric auctions. July 1997 Paper: scpgii.ps . July 1987 Appendix: scpgiiap.ps.
Optimal Collusion with Private Information. Kyle Bagwell RAND Journal of Economics September 2001, 32 (3): 428-465. MIT Working Paper 99-12.
Information andCompetition in U.S. Forest Service Timber Auctions. Jonathan Levin Journal of Political Economy, 109 (2), April 2001.

3. Econometric Theory (Identification and Estimation Approaches)

Paper Title Coauthors Citation Last Revised
Discrete Choice Models with Multiple Unobserved Choice Characteristics Guido Imbens International Economic Review 2007, Volume 48 (4), 1159-1192 . April, 2007
Empirical Models of Auctions Phil Haile Invited lecture prepared for the Ninth World Congress of the Econometric Society, London September, 2005
An Empirical Framework for Testing Theories About Complementarity in Organizational Design Scott Stern NBER Working Paper 6600 February, 1998
Nonparametric Approaches to Auctions Philip Haile Handbook of Econometrics, Volume 6, Forthcoming. 2005
Identification and Inference in Nonlinear Difference-in-Differences Models“”Supplemental Material

Matlab Programs and Documentation for Applying CIC Model and generating tables (check with authors for potential updates and for Stata implementation)

Guido Imbens Econometrica, 74 (2), March 2006, pp. 431-497. Slides for UCL seminar: “Distributions of Treatment Effects in Experimental Settings: Applications of Nonlinear Difference-in-Difference Models
“Identification in Standard Auction Models” (Sept. 2001 version) Philip Haile Econometrica, 70 (6), November 2002, pp. 2107-2140. August, 2000.

4. Monotone Comparative Statics and Applications (Value of Information, Uncertainty, Existence of Equilibria, Strategic Substitutes)

Paper Title Coauthors Citation Last Revised
Monotone Comparative Statics Under Uncertainty. Quarterly Journal of Economics, CXVII (1), February 2002, 187-223. 1998 Working Paper Version, MIT Working Paper 96-22, with additional results.
Single Crossing Properties and the Existence of Pure Strategy Equlibria in Games of Incomplete Information.” Econometrica 69 (4) July 2001: 861-890. The July 1997 version has numerical analysis of asymmetric auctions. July 1997 Paper: scpgii.ps . July 1987 Appendix: scpgiiap.ps.
Investment and Market Dominance.” Armin Schmutzler RAND Journal of Economics 32 (1), Spring 2001: 1-26.
Product and Process Flexibility in an Innovative Environment Armin Schmutzler RAND Journal of Economics, 26 (4) Winter1995: 557-574.
The Value of Information in Monotone Decision Problems Jonathan Levin MIT Working Paper 98-24 December, 2001
Investment and Information Value for a Risk-Averse Firm. MIT Working Paper 00-30 November, 2000
Characterizing Properties of Stochastic Objective Functions. MIT Working Paper 96-1R October, 2000
“Robust Comparative Statics”Draft of Chapters 0-4Teaching notes for a graduate micro class integrated with some producer theory

Note: this draft may have typos and is generally not polished. I have posted it in response to requests, but please use at your own risk.

Paul Milgrom, John Roberts 1998

5. Economics of Organizations

Paper Title Coauthors Citation Last Revised
What Does Performance in Graduate School Predict? Graduate Economics Education and Student Outcomes Larry Katz, Alan Krueger, James Poterba, and Steve Levitt American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings, May 2007, Forthcoming. January, 2007.
Coming soon… “The Dynamics of Open Source Software” Glenn Ellison Working Paper January, 2006 (preliminary)
Coming soon… “A Theory of Community Formation and Social Hierarchy” Saumitra Jha Working Paper In progress
The Impact of Information Technology on Emergency Health Care Outcomes Scott Stern RAND Journal of Economics, 33 (3), Autumn 2002, pp. 399-432.
Organizational Design: Decision Rights and Incentive Contracts. John Roberts American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings, May 2001.
Mentoring and Diversity Chris Avery and Peter Zemsky American Economic Review 90 (4) September 2000: 765-786. October1998 version (includes labor market model).
Information Technology and Training in Emergency Call Centers. Scott Stern Proceedings of the Fifty-First Annual Meetings (New York, Jan 3-5, 1999). Madison, WI: Industrial Relations Research Association, pp. 53-60.
An Empirical Framework for Testing Theories About Complementarity in Organizational Design Scott Stern NBER Working Paper 6600 February, 1998
Product and Process Flexibility in an Innovative Environment Armin Schmutzler RAND Journal of Economics, 26 (4) Winter1995: 557-574.

6. Empirical Industrial Organization and Econometrics of IO

Paper Title Coauthors Working Paper Number Last Revised
Comparing Open and Sealed Bid Auctions: Theory and Evidence from Timber Auctions Jonathan Levin Working Paper September, 2004
Coming soon… “Set-Asides and Subsidies in Auctions” Jonathan Levin Working Paper In progress
Nonparametric Approaches to Auctions Philip Haile Handbook of Econometrics, Volume 6, Forthcoming. 2005
Discrete Choice Models with Multiple Unobserved Choice Characteristics Guido Imbens International Economic Review 2007, Volume 48 (4), 1159-1192 . April, 2007
Empirical Models of Auctions Phil Haile Invited lecture prepared for the Ninth World Congress of the Econometric Society, London September, 2005
The Impact of Information Technology on Emergency Health Care Outcomes Scott Stern RAND Journal of Economics, 33 (3), Autumn 2002, pp. 399-432.
An Empirical Framework for Testing Theories About Complementarity in Organizational Design Scott Stern NBER Working Paper 6600 February, 1998
“Identification in Standard Auction Models” (Sept. 2001 version) Philip Haile Econometrica, 70 (6), November 2002, pp. 2107-2140. August, 2000.
Information andCompetition and U.S. Forest Service Timber Auctions. Jonathan Levin Journal of Political Economy, 109 (2), April 2001.
Information Technology and Training in Emergency Call Centers. Scott Stern Proceedings of the Fifty-First Annual Meetings (New York, Jan 3-5, 1999). Madison, WI: Industrial Relations Research Association, pp. 53-60.

I am grateful to the National Science Foundation, SBR-9631760, SES-9983820, and SES-0351500 for supporting much of the research listed above. Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recomendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation (NSF), MIT, Stanford, or the National Bureau of Economic Research.

Other Affiliations

Other material

According to Susan, you can a non-technical review of her studies here. This is excellent. In her words — [it] provides a somewhat chatty discussion of selected research papers that may be accessible to a broader audience. It starts with a discussion of different styles of research in economics, to try to better explain how some of my “basic research” fits in and how it might be used by other economists, and why it might be important even if it doesn’t directly relate to policy. The document then provides more in-depth discussion of a few selected papers in different areas of economics.

At the end of each extended description of a paper or set of papers, I have included an “executive summary” that boils the ideas down to a few sentences.

Categories: Economics
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SEC: 04-27-09 Roundtable on May 5 to Examine Short Sale Price Test & Circuit Breaker Restrictions

April 27, 2009 · Leave a Comment

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2009-88

Washington, D.C., April 24, 2009 — The Securities and Exchange Commission will hold a roundtable on May 5 beginning at 10 a.m. ET to further discuss whether short sale price test restrictions or short sale circuit breakers should be adopted.

The Commission voted unanimously on April 8 to propose two approaches to restrictions on short selling. If adopted, the price test approach would apply on a permanent market-wide basis, and the circuit breaker approach would apply to a particular security during severe market declines in the price of that security.

“This roundtable will help ensure that any policy decisions going forward in the area of short selling regulation are the product of a highly deliberate review process,” said SEC Chairman Mary L. Schapiro.

Roundtable participants will include leaders from self-regulatory organizations, trading venues, the financial services industry, investment firms, and the academic community. The final agenda and list of panelists will be announced at a later date.

The roundtable will be held in the auditorium at the SEC’s headquarters at 100 F Street, N.E., in Washington, D.C. The roundtable will be open to the public with seating on a first-come, first-served basis. The roundtable also will be webcast on the SEC Web site.

For additional information about the roundtable, contact the SEC’s Division of Trading and Markets at (202) 551-5720.

* * *

Preliminary Agenda for Short Sale Restrictions Roundtable

Categories: Financial Economics
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Fraud: 04-27-09 SEC Halts Donald Anthony Young, Misappropriating Millions in Client Assets

April 27, 2009 · Leave a Comment

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2009-85

Washington, D.C., April 20, 2009 — The Securities and Exchange Commission has charged a Philadelphia-area investment adviser and its principal with misappropriating millions of dollars in client assets, and obtained an emergency court order freezing their assets.

The SEC alleges that through a commingled brokerage account, Donald Anthony Walker Young of Coatesville, Pa., and Acorn Capital Management, LLC misappropriated more than $23 million from investors buying limited partnership interests in Acorn II LP, which invested in publicly traded securities. Young used investor funds to pay other investors in the nature of a Ponzi scheme, and directly stole some of the money to purchase a vacation home in Palm Beach, Fla., and pay personal expenses related to horse ownership and racing, construction, boats, limousines, chartered aircraft and other luxuries. According to the SEC’s complaint, the defendants refused to provide Commission staff with client files, account statements, general ledgers and other documents that are statutorily required to be maintained and produced by registered investment advisers.

“As alleged in our complaint, Young covered up his thefts by giving phony information to accountants who kept track of each investor’s capital balance, and giving false statements to investors that didn’t reflect the thefts,” said Robert Khuzami, Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement. “Young led investors to believe their money was being invested properly when in reality he was spending it unscrupulously.”

Daniel M. Hawke, Director of the SEC’s Philadelphia Regional Office, said, “Young repeatedly refused to provide Commission staff with required documents that would have revealed his scheme. The staff has gone to great lengths to develop the evidence necessary to halt this fraud.”

The Honorable John R. Padova, U.S. District Judge for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, issued an order on April 17 granting a temporary restraining order, freezing assets and imposing other emergency relief for investors.

According to the SEC’s complaint, Young established Acorn II LP in 2001 and has nearly complete control of all aspects of the operations and makes all of the investment decisions. In addition, he has complete control of and access to the assets of Acorn II LP held at a broker-dealer. Young also controls the information provided to investors, accountants and the broker-dealer and he has used this information flow to provide false information about investor deposits and withdrawals, and to perpetuate the scheme.

The SEC alleges that although the Acorn II LP account currently holds approximately $3 million for approximately 40 investors, Young has told investors through quarterly and annual statements that their account balances are much higher. In February 2009, Young gave phony documents to employees at the broker-dealer to deceive them into believing that Acorn II LP held an additional $23 million at two other broker-dealers.

The SEC’s complaint alleges violations of Section 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5 thereunder, and Sections 204, 206(1), 206(2) and 206(4) of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and Rules 204-2 and 206(4)-8 thereunder. In addition to the emergency relief, the Commission’s complaint seeks disgorgement of the defendants’ ill-gotten gains plus pre-judgment interest, financial penalties, and permanent injunctions barring future violations of the charged provisions of the federal securities laws.

The SEC’s investigation is continuing.

The SEC acknowledges the assistance of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

# # #

For more information, contact:

Daniel M. Hawke, Regional Director
Elaine C. Greenberg, Associate Regional Director
David S. Horowitz, Assistant Regional Director
SEC’s Philadelphia Regional Office
215-597-3100

Categories: Financial Economics
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William Dudley: 04-27-09 The Fed’s Liquidity Facilities

April 27, 2009 · Leave a Comment

The Federal Reserve’s Liquidity Facilities
April 18, 2009

William C. Dudley , President and Chief Executive Officer

Remarks at the Vanderbilt University Conference on Financial Markets and Financial Policy Honoring Dewey Daane, Nashville, Tennessee

Thank you for having me here today. It is a great honor to be on a panel with Peter Fisher and Bill Poole. I am the neophyte here in terms of central banking experience!

Before I begin, let me emphasize that my comments represent my own views and opinions and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Federal Open Market Committee or of the Federal Reserve System.

I am going to talk today about the Fed’s provision of liquidity to banks and dealers and to market participants more generally.

I would break down our actions into three broad classes.

First, we addressed the acute seizing up of inter-bank financing markets. For banks, we introduced the Term Auction Facility in December 2007 and for the primary dealers, the Term Securities Lending Facility and Primary Dealer Credit Facility in March 2008. In addition, the Federal Reserve entered into FX swap agreements with major global central banks in order to channel dollar liquidity to banks overseas.

Second, we expanded our provision of short term financing beyond banks and dealers in order to alleviate constraints on highly rated corporate borrowers. The two most noteworthy examples of this are the Commercial Paper Funding Facility, which was introduced in October 2008, and the Term Asset-Backed Securities Lending Facility (announced in November 2008, but not up and running until last month.)

Third, once policy rates were near the zero-bound, we expanded the type of assets that the Fed purchased. In order to put downward pressure on general longer term borrowing rates, particularly mortgage rates, the Federal Reserve has purchased the debt of the GSEs, namely, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the mortgage-backed-securities they issue, and, more recently, longer-term Treasuries.

So why has the Fed done so much in terms of special programs?

As I see it, there are four major reasons behind the dramatic expansion of the Fed’s liquidity programs:

  1. To provide liquidity to banks and dealers in order to slow down the deleveraging process.
  2. To expand the balance sheet capacity of the private sector to counteract the shrinkage underway in the non-bank financial sector.
  3. To restore and improve market function.
  4. To ease financial market conditions.

This financial crisis has been marked by the rapid deleveraging of the non-bank financial sector. This deleveraging has been driven mainly by the collapse of securitization activity, pressure on dealers to reduce leverage and the spillover of these efforts on to other financial players such as hedge funds.

This deleveraging process, in turn, has put intense pressure on the balance sheet capacity of the banking sector. Not only can banks no longer securitize assets as before, but assets that they thought were off their books have come back on.

Although the deleveraging process is inevitable following periods when the financial system has become overextended, it does matter how this deleveraging process takes place. In the current crisis, the deleveraging process at times has been very violent and dangerous, with powerful reinforcing feedback loops intensifying the process. During these episodes, bystanders who did not engage in excess may be trampled and fail. This may exacerbate the tightening in financial conditions, intensifying the constraint on credit availability and the downward pressure on economic activity.

For example, in March 2008, in the run-up to Bear Stearns’ demise, the deleveraging process intensified. Market volatility increased; this caused lenders to increase the haircuts they assessed against collateral to secure their lending. The higher haircuts, in turn, squeezed highly leveraged investors who were forced to sell assets. This drove down asset prices and increased price volatility further, leading to still-higher haircuts. This intensified the deleveraging process, which led to more mark-to-market losses.

The Federal Reserve’s facilities for banks and dealers have been designed, in part, to slow down the deleveraging process. The TAF, the TSLF and the PDCF have provided assurance to banks and dealers that they have a place where they can obtain funding for their less liquid collateral. As a result, they will not be forced to dump assets, further depressing market prices, increasing volatility and the upward pressure on haircuts. The deleveraging will still take place—and we have seen it—just not so quickly and violently that it would destabilize the entire financial system.

The second major intent of the liquidity facilities has been for the Fed to expand its balance sheet and, by doing so, offset some of shrinkage that has been occurring among non-bank financial intermediaries. The fact is the banking system is capital-constrained, with insufficient capital to expand its balance sheet fast enough to offset the shrinkage evident in the non-bank sector. Although the Federal Reserve cannot create capital for banks, it can provide funding directly to the private sector, attenuating the consequences caused by a balance-sheet-constrained banking system.

The CPFF and the TALF are both important in restoring the flow of credit to borrowers. The CPFF essentially jump-started the commercial paper market, which had largely shut down following the failure of Lehman Brothers in September.

The TALF’s purpose is to restart the securitization markets, and thereby lower the cost of borrowing to households and business. The TALF does this by providing term, non-recourse loans to investors against AAA-rated collateral. Investor demand for these loans leads to downward pressure on AAA-rated financing rates, lowering the cost of credit. Although TALF is off to a relatively slow start—hurt, in part, by the reluctance of some investors to participate because of worries about the potential implications for them of the TARP funding that is involved in the TALF program, it has helped to restart the securitization markets in the consumer asset-backed securities area and has brought down funding costs for consumer ABS issuers.

The third goal of these policy interventions has been to improve market function. By dramatically reducing rollover risk, the Federal Reserve’s willingness to serve as the lender or investor of last resort has helped improve market function in a broad number of areas. Rollover risk is the risk that a borrower may not be able to obtain new funding in order to repay an investor when the investor needs the funds for other uses. If rollover risk is high, the investor is going to be concerned about getting its funds back and, thus, may be unwilling to make the investment in the first place. The impact of the Fed’s intervention on rollover risk has been especially important in the triparty repo market and in the commercial paper market.

The triparty repo market is a market in which investors such as money market mutual funds lend funds, mostly on an overnight basis, to securities dealers, with the loans collateralized by high-quality securities. During the crisis, this market became less stable. As the financial condition of some of the major securities dealers worsened, the clearing banks became more reluctant to return the cash that the triparty repo investors had invested the prior evening. The clearing banks were worried that if a dealer were to fail, they could be stuck with a large obligation. The nervousness of the clearing banks, in turn, spilled back to the investors. If there is some chance that I might not get my cash back and instead be stuck with the collateral, do I really want to make the loan in the first place? The Primary Dealer Credit Facility essentially broke this dynamic by putting the Federal Reserve in the position of lender of last resort in the triparty repo system. With the Federal Reserve willing to lend against collateral, the clearing banks no longer have significant intraday risk exposure. The triparty repo investors have been reassured that they would be paid back. As a consequence, they were willing to keep investing.

The TAF and the dollar facilities offered by foreign central banks provided the same antidote to rollover risk in the interbank funding markets. Banks that were reluctant to lend to one another because of rollover risk became willing to reengage because they knew that the Federal Reserve and foreign central banks would lend against high-quality collateral.

By eliminating rollover risk, the CPFF also helped to restore market function in the commercial paper market. Commercial paper investors who had shunned the market returned because they were no longer worried that they could get their money back. In extremis, the Federal Reserve could purchase the commercial paper from the issuer, generating the funds to repay the private investors’ commercial paper investment.

The fourth and final goal of the Fed’s liquidity facilities has been to ease financial conditions. This has been particularly important in the current environment because the federal funds rate cannot be pushed below zero (the so-called zero-bound constraint). This means that with the federal funds rate having been effectively lowered as far as it can go, the Federal Reserve has had to turn to other tools such as asset purchase programs if it is to ease financial conditions further as warranted given macroeconomic conditions.

The Federal Reserve’s purchases of agency debt, agency MBS and longer-term Treasuries have been implemented mainly with one goal in mind—reduce longer-term private sector interest rates, and thereby provide stimulus to the U.S. economy.

The Federal Reserve’s Treasury purchase program is designed to hold down the level of longer-term interest rates. To the extent that a lower level of long-term Treasury rates pulls down the level of private long-term rates, then these purchases should also ease financial market conditions.

So how have the Fed’s facilities worked in practice?

In general, I think the facilities have worked quite well. In those areas where the facilities have been active, we generally have seen an improvement in market conditions.

But the facilities have not been a panacea for three reasons. First, the facilities cannot address the fundamental problem—the shortage of capital in the banking system. The facilities can slow down the deleveraging process, but until the banking system is viewed as being sufficiently well-capitalized and is able to expand its lending activity significantly, the limits on credit availability caused by an impaired banking system will make it more difficult to generate a sustainable economic recovery.

Second, there are limits on what the Fed can do legally. For example, the Fed can only lend if it is secured to its satisfaction. There has to be sufficient collateral available. The Fed cannot lend on an unsecured basis or provide guarantees. And the Fed cannot purchase assets other than Treasuries, agencies and agency MBS, and short-dated general obligations of states and municipalities.

Third, the effectiveness of some of the Fed facilities have been undercut by stigma—the discount window is the best example of this—or by worries about what other strings are or might be attached to the use of the facilities—the TALF comes to mind in this respect.

One reason why the TALF has gotten off to a relatively slow start is the reluctance of investors to participate. Issuers’ interest, not surprisingly, dwarfs investor demand at this stage of the program. Some investors are apparently reluctant not because the economics of the program are unattractive, but because of worries about what participation might lead to. The TARP loans to banks led to intense scrutiny of bank compensation practices given that TALF loans are ultimately secured by TARP funds, investor anxiety about using the program has risen.

My own view is that these fears are misplaced. The TARP funds in the TALF program only come in on the backend of the program when loans are put back to the Fed. The lending to investors on the front end is completely a Federal Reserve program and operation. That being said, I understand the reasons for the anxiety given the political discourse on this subject. I think it is worth emphasizing that actions that lead investors to shun taking risk, especially in this environment, are ultimately detrimental to the ability of households and businesses to secure credit at reasonable borrowing rates.

The Federal Reserve’s liquidity facilities and asset purchase programs have led to a substantial expansion of the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet since September 2008. Currently, the Fed’s balance sheet totals about $2.2 trillion, up from about $900 billion last fall prior to Lehman’s failure.

In thinking about this balance sheet expansion, I would make three broad points. First, in my mind, the goal is not the expansion of the balance sheet per se, but the objectives that I laid out earlier. In this respect, the expansion of the balance sheet differs considerably from Japan’s experience with quantitative easing. In the current circumstance, the Federal Reserve’s liquidity programs act on the asset side of the balance sheet as the Fed lends funds against less liquid collateral and expands its asset holdings via purchases of agency debt, agency MBS and Treasuries. The goals are to slow down the pace of deleveraging to reduce the risk of catastrophic failure, improve market function and ease financial market conditions.

In contrast, the Bank of Japan worked on the liability side of the balance. Their goal was to expand the amount of excess reserves held by the banking system so that the banks would be more willing to expand their credit provisions. Although the Fed’s activities have led to a big jump in excess reserves, this increase is incidental—a byproduct rather than goal of the asset-oriented programs.

Second, as a consequence of this my point, the size of the balance sheet, is not a good metric for measuring the impact of the Fed’s facilities or the amount of stimulus that the Fed is providing via these programs. For example, consider the impact of the Fed facilities on rollover risk. A Fed facility that eliminates rollover risk might not be used at all. There might be no balance sheet impact. Nevertheless, the facility could have an important impact on market function and financial market conditions.

It is not possible to mechanically map the size of the balance sheet back onto the impact on financial market conditions. That is because the balance sheet size is being driven by a large number of different actions. Is a dollar of TAF lending equivalent to a dollar extended through the CPFF or to a dollar of Treasury purchases? How important is the PDCF? It backstops lots of lending, but outstanding amounts are very low. The differences between the various programs and activities mean that the balance sheet size should be interpreted in light of the impact on market function and financial market conditions, not by the impact on the size of the balance sheet.

The size of the balance sheet is also not a good standard because the use of the different facilities depends on the degree of impairment in market function. If market conditions were to deteriorate, I would expect that usage of the Fed’s facilities would increase and the balance sheet would grow in size. This would be appropriate. The Fed’s balance sheet would act as a shock absorber, cushioning the impact of the shift in market conditions. In such circumstances, the balance sheet would act as a counter-cyclical dampening mechanism. I would view that as a desirable outcome.

In contrast, if the Fed were committed to a particular balance sheet trajectory, then, as market conditions improved and financial conditions eased and usage of the Fed’s liquidity facilities diminished, the Fed would have to offset this by increasing the scope of its liquidity facilities or by expanding its asset purchase programs. It is unclear to me why the Federal Reserve would want to apply more stimulus at a time when market conditions were improving. This suggests that some variability in the trajectory of the Fed’s balance should be expected and might even be desirable. And, in fact, this is what we have seen in practice.

Third, I am not worried at all that the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet expansion will generate an inflation problem. It should be emphasized that the Federal Reserve has the ability to manage down the size of its balance sheet over time once financial conditions and the economy improve. Many of the liquidity facilities will shrink automatically as financial conditions normalize. With the exception of TAF loans, all of the other Fed liquidity facilities charge rates that are higher than what one would expect during more normal financial circumstances. And, if we want the TAF loans to shrink, we can either shrink the amounts on offer or raise the interest rate we charge, or both. The other assets such as Treasury securities and agency MBS can be sold or the impact on reserves be offset by repurchase operations that drain reserves from the banking system.

More importantly, the Federal Reserve now has the tools to allow the conduct of monetary policy to be separated from the size of the balance sheet and the amount of excess reserves in the banking system. In September 2008, the Federal Reserve gained the authority to pay interest on excess reserves. This provides a tool that allows Fed officials to tighten monetary policy and raise private sector interest rates by raising the rate paid on excess reserves.

Some skeptics note that when interest on excess reserves was first implemented, the federal funds rate traded somewhat below the rate on excess reserves. This has created worry in some quarters that paying interest on excess reserves might not work very well as a tool for controlling the federal funds rate.

On this issue, two points are warranted. First, the relatively large gap between the interest rate on excess reserves and the federal funds rate was due, in large part, to the impaired condition of the banking system, which inhibited the willingness of banks to arbitrage that gap. Because balance sheet capacity was scarce, banks were reluctant to use their balance sheets to purchase federal funds at a slight discount to the interest on excess reserves rate. As the banking system returns to health, this arbitrage is likely to become more attractive, causing the gap between the interest rate on excess reserves and the federal funds rate to narrow.

Second, the Federal Reserve could alter its monetary policy framework in order to increase its control of monetary policy in a large excess reserve environment. It is beyond the scope of this speech to get into the details, but we have plenty of options in devising incentives for banks to hold reserves at the Fed that would improve our ability to control the federal funds rate. The challenge will be deciding on the best option, not in finding a workable approach.

Thank you for your attention.

I am happy to take any questions.

Categories: Banking
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TALF: 04-27-09 New Terms & FAQ

April 27, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility
The Federal Reserve created the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF), to help market participants meet the credit needs of households and small businesses by supporting the issuance of asset-backed securities (ABS) collateralized by student loans, auto loans, credit card loans, and loans guaranteed by the Small Business Administration (SBA).

Announcements
Federal Reserve announces two new interest rates applicable to loans extended under TALF
April 21, 2009
New York Fed announces May 5 TALF operation
April 21, 2009
SIGTARP Quarterly Report to Congress:
Letter from Thomas C. Baxter, Jr., General Counsel pdf
SIGTARP quarterly report to Congresspdf offsite
April 21, 2009
Joint response to the Congressional Oversight Panel’s inquiry into the TALF:
Letter from Chairman Bernanke and President Dudley pdf
Responses to March 20 Inquiry pdf
April 7, 2009
New York Fed announces $1.7 billion in TALF loans requested at April 7 facility
April 7, 2009
New York Fed issues revised TALF documents:
Terms and Conditions
FAQs
Documents and Forms
April 3, 2009
New York Fed releases initial results of first round of TALF loan requests
March 19, 2009
Board announces set of eligible collateral for loans extended by TALF is expanded to include four additional categories of asset-backed securities offsite
March 19, 2009
New York Fed posts loan rates for March 17-19 TALF operation
March 19, 2009
New York Fed releases revised TALF FAQS
March 17, 2009
New York Fed extends first TALF subscription
March 13, 2009
New York Fed releases revised TALF FAQs and related documents
March 11, 2009
New York Fed releases revised TALF Master Loan and Security Agreement and appendices
March 3, 2009
New York Fed Announces March 17 TALF Operation
March 3, 2009
Treasury and Federal Reserve announce launch of Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility offsite
March 3, 2009
TALF Auditor Attestation Form pdf
February 20, 2009
Form of Certification as to TALF Eligibility pdf
February 19, 2009
TALF Master Loan and Security Agreement pdf
February 18, 2009
Federal Reserve is prepared to expand Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility offsite
February 10, 2009
Federal Reserve releases additional terms and conditions of the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility offsite
February 6, 2009
Federal Reserve releases revised information detailing operational aspects of Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF) offsite
December 19, 2008
Federal Reserve announces the creation of the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF) offsite

Questions and comments regarding the TALF can be sent to talf@ny.frb.org

Categories: Banking
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