> Publishers' series
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no. 24, 1:
Report on the potential impacts of property tax abatement on rental housing construction in Boston Patricia Alejandro, Mary Ellen Carter, Denise DiPasquale, Edward Glaeser, Adam Guren, and Paul Willen
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2024]
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no. 24, 3:
Income and the CARD Act's ability-to-pay rule in the US credit card market Scott Fulford and Joanna Stavins
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2024]
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no. 24, 4:
Risk sharing and amplification in the global banking network Leslie Sheng Shen and Tony Zhang
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2024]
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no. 24, 2:
The Fed takes on corporate credit risk an analysis of the efficacy of the SMCCF Simon Gilchrist, Bin Wei, Vivian Z. Yue, and Egon Zakrajšek
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2024]
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no. 24, 5:
Relationship lending that ship has not sailed for community banks Dmytro Holod, Joe Peek, and Gökhan Torna
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2024]
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no. 23, 14:
Decomposing lifetime-earnings differences between white, black, and hispanic families Hope Bodenschatz, Gerald E. Daniels Jr., and Jeffrey P. Thompson
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2023]
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no. 23, 16:
The channels of international comovement Omar Barbiero
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2023]
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no. 23, 18:
Occupational licensing and occupational mobility Osborne Jackson
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2023]
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no. 23, 4:
Personality traits and financial outcomes Claire Greene, Oz Shy, and Joanna Stavins
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2023]
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no. 23, 7:
The impact of learning disabilities on children and parental outcomes evidence from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics Rachel Cummings and María José Luengo-Prado
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2023]
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no. 23, 8:
Risk management and derivatives losses Gabriel Levin-Konigsberg, Hillary Stein, Vicente García Averell, and Calixto López Castañon
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2023]
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no. 23, 10:
Lease expirations and CRE property performance David P. Glancy and J. Christina Wang
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2023]
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no. 23, 9:
Cost-price relationships in a concentrated economy Falk Bräuning, José L. Fillat, and Gustavo Joaquim
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2023]
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no. 23, 12:
Household liquidity and macroeconomic stabilization evidence from mortgage forbearance Sean Chanwook Lee and Omeed Maghzian
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2023]
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no. 23, 11:
Runs and flights to safety are stablecoins the new money market funds? Kenechukwu Anadu, Pablo D. Azar, Marco Cipriani, Thomas M. Eisenbach, Catherine Huang, Mattia Landoni, Gabriele La Spada, Marco Macchiavelli, Antoine Malfroy-Camine, and J. Christina Wang
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2023]
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no. 23, 13:
The aggregate effects of sectoral shocks in an open economy Philippe Andrade, Martin Arazi, and Viacheslav Sheremirov
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2023]
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no. 23, 1:
Got milk? the effect of export price shocks on exchange rates Hillary Stein
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2023]
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no. 23, 15:
Informal work and official employment statistics: what's missing? Anat Bracha and Mary A. Burke
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2023]
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no. 23, 19:
Job loss, credit card loans, and the college-persistence decision of US working students Pinghui Wu and Lucy McMillan
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2023]
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no. 23, 17:
The impact of a man-made disaster on consumer credit outcomes evidence from the 2018 Merrimack Valley natural gas explosions Bo Zhao
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2023]
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no. 23, 2:
House prices and rents in the 21st century Lara Loewenstein and Paul S. Willen
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2023]
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no. 23, 3:
To what degree and through which channel do central banks other than the Federal Reserve cause spillovers? Christopher D. Cotton
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2023]
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no. 23, 5:
Sustainable consumption and the comprehensive economic well-being of American households Daniel H. Cooper, Barry Z. Cynamon, and Steven M. Fazzari
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2023]
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no. 23, 6:
The tail that wagged the dog what explains the persistent employment effect of the 10-day PPP funding delay? Olga Gorbachev, María J. Luengo-Prado and J. Christina Wang
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2023]
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no. 22, 11:
Finding needles in haystacks multiple-imputation record linkage using machine learning John M. Abowd, Joelle Abramowitz, Margaret C. Levenstein, Kristin McCue, Dhiren Patki, Trivellore Raghunathan, Ann M. Rodgers, Matthew D. Shapiro, Nada Wasi, and Dawn Zinsser
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 14:
Do multisectoral New Keynesian models match sectoral data? Philippe Andrade and Viacheslav Sheremirov
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 6:
Payments evolution from paper to electronic payments by merchant type Ruth Cohen, Oz Shy, and Joanna Stavins
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 10:
How to increase housing affordability understanding local deterrents to building multifamily housing Amrita Kulka, Aradhya Sood, and Nicholas Chiumenti
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 15:
The impact of the age distribution on unemployment evidence from US states Bruce Fallick and Christopher L. Foote
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 16:
Wage inequality and the rise in labor force exit the case of US prime-age men Pinghui Wu
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 17:
Government transfers and consumer spending among households with children during COVID-19 Pinghui Wu, Vincent Fusaro, and H. Luke Shaefer
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 12:
Bad times, bad jobs? how recessions affect early career trajectories Parag Mahajan, Dhiren Patki, and Heiko Stüber
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 18:
Who is paying all these fees? an empirical analysis of bank account and credit card fees Oz Shy and Joanna Stavins
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 13:
Did high leverage render small businesses vulnerable to the COVID-19 shock? Falk Bräuning, José L. Fillat, and J. Christina Wang
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 4:
Inflation levels and (in)attention Anat Bracha and Jenny Tang
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 7:
Impact of occupational unemployment risk on household spending Christopher D. Cotton, Vaishali Garga, and Justin Rohan
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 5:
High-yield debt covenants and their real effects Falk Bräuning, Victoria Ivashina, and Ali Ozdagli
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 19:
Assessing central bank commitment to inflation targeting evidence from financial market expectations in India Vaishali Garga, Aeimit Lakdawala, and Rajeswari Sengupta
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 20:
Government banks and interventions in credit markets Gustavo Joaquim, Felipe Netto, and José Renato Haas Ornelas
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 22:
The impact of weather on local government spending Bo Zhao
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 21:
Looking beyond the fed do central banks cause information effects? Christopher D. Cotton
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 25:
Employment trajectories among individuals with opioid use disorder can evidence-based treatment improve outcomes? Mary A. Burke, Riley Sullivan, Katherine Carman, Hefei Wen, J. Frank Wharam, and Hao Yu
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 23:
What do 25 million records of small businesses say about the effects of the PPP? Gustavo Joaquim and J. Christina Wang
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 24:
The Main Street Lending Program who borrowed and how have they benefited? J. Christina Wang
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 8:
Credit card debt puzzle liquid assets to pay bills Claire Greene and Joanna Stavins
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 9:
The role of industrial composition in driving the frequency of price change Christopher D. Cotton and Vaishali Garga
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 2:
Interest rate surprises a tale of two shocks Ricardo Nunes, Ali Ozdagli, and Jenny Tang
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 1:
Should the ECB adjust its strategy in the face of a lower r*? Philippe Andrade, Jordi Galí, Hervé Le Bihan, and Julien Matheron
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 22, 3:
Racial wealth disparities reconsidering the roles of human capital and inheritance John Sabelhaus and Jeffrey P. Thompson
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2022]
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no. 21, 12:
Has COVID changed consumer payment behavior? Claire Greene, Ellen Merry, Joanna Stavins
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2021]
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no. 21, 13:
The transmission mechanisms of international business cycles: output spillovers through trade and financial linkages Falk Bräuning and Viacheslav Sheremirov
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2021]
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no. 21, 9:
Rising geographic disparities in US mortality Benjamin K. Couillard, Christopher L. Foote, Kavish Gandhi, Ellen Meara, and Jonathan Skinner
Boston: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2021]
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no. 21, 7:
Breaking the implicit contract using pension freezes to study lifetime labor supply Dhiren Patki
Boston: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2021]
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no. 21, 4:
How resilient is mortgage credit supply? evidence from the COVID-19 pandemic Andreas Fuster, Aurel Hizmo, Lauren Lambie-Hanson, James Vickery, and Paul Willen
Boston: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2021]
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no. 21, 6:
Wealth concentration in the United States using an expanded measure of net worth Lindsay Jacobs, Elizabeth Llanes, Kevin Moore, Jeffrey Thompson, and Alice Henriques Volz
Boston: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2021]
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no. 21, 5:
Payments evolution from paper to electronic bill payments and purchases Joanna Stavins
Boston: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2021]
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no. 21, 11:
The valuation effects of trade Omar Barbiero
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2021]
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no. 21, 14:
Opting in with the joneses: what affects the timing of municipal adoption of a local-option meals tax? Bo Zhao
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2021]
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no. 21, 15:
Bank incentives and the effect of the paycheck protection program Gustavo Joaquim and Felipe Netto
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2021]
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no. 21, 10:
High-frequency spending responses to government transfer payments Daniel H. Cooper and Giovanni P. Olivei
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2021]
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no. 21, 16:
Optimal allocation of relief funds: the case of the paycheck protection program Gustavo Joaquim and Felipe Netto
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2021]
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no. 21, 18:
Corporate finance and the transmission of shocks to the real economy Falk Bräuning, José Fillat, and Gustavo Joaquim
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2021]
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no. 21, 20:
On the origins of the multinational premium José Fillat and Stefania Garetto
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2021]
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no. 21, 17:
Did the affordable care act affect access to medications for opioid use disorder among the already insured? evidence from the Rhode Island all-payer claims database Mary A. Burke, Katherine Carman, Riley Sullivan, Hefei Wen, J. Frank Wharam, and Hao Yu
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2021]
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no. 21, 19:
Job displacement and sectoral mobility Osborne Jackson
[Boston]: [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston], [2021]
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no. 21, 8:
The mortgage cash flow channel of monetary policy transmission a tale of two countries Daniel Cooper, Vaishali Garga, and María José Luengo-Prado
Boston: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2021]
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no. 21, 1:
How to design a state education aid formula that is equitable, adequate, and politically feasible the case of Connecticut Bo Zhao
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2021]
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no. 21, 3:
Who gets medication-assisted treatment for opioid use disorder, and does it reduce overdose risk? evidence from the Rhode Island all-payer claims database Mary A. Burke, Riley Sullivan, Katherine Carman, Hefei Wen, J. Frank Wharam and Hao Yu
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2021]
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no. 21, 2:
The roles of state aid and local conditions in elementary school test-score gaps Katharine Bradbury
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2021]
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no. 20, 7:
Mortgage prepayment, race, and monetary policy Kristopher Gerardi, Paul Willen, and David Hao Zhang
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 20, 10:
Bargaining power and outside options in the interbank lending market bargaining power and outside options in the interbank lending market Puriya Abbassi, Falk Bräuning and Niels Schulze
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 20, 9:
Consumer payment choice for bill payments Claire Greene and Joanna Stavins
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 20, 2:
The inflation target and the equilibrium real rate Christopher D. Cotton
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 20, 1:
Punishment and crime the impact of felony conviction on criminal activity Osborne Jackson
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 20, 11:
Fiscal expansions in the era of low real interest rates Vaishali Garga
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 20, 3:
No longer qualified? changes in the supply and demand for skills within occupations Mary A. Burke, Alicia Sasser Modestino, Shahriar Sadighi, Rachel B. Sederberg, and Bledi Taska
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 20, 4:
Wealth distribution and retirement preparation among early savers Lindsay Jacobs, Elizabeth Llanes, Kevin Moore, Jeffrey Thompson, and Alice Henriques Volz
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 20, 8:
Real effects of foreign exchange risk migration evidence from matched firm-bank microdata Puriya Abbassi and Falk Bräuning
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 20, 20:
A fundamental connection exchange rates and macroeconomic expectations Vania Stavrakeva and Jenny Tang
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 20, 18:
What matters in households' inflation expectations? Philippe Andrade, Erwan Gautier, and Eric Mengus
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 20, 19:
Do lenders still discriminate? a robust approach for assessing differences in menus David Hao Zhang and Paul Willen
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 20, 16:
Consumption heterogeneity by occupation understanding the impact of occupation on personal consumption during the COVID-19 pandemic Christopher D. Cotton, Vaishali Garga and Justin Rohan
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 20, 17:
No firm Is an Island? how industry conditions shape firms' expectations Philippe Andrade, Olivier Coibion, Erwan Gautier and Yuriy Gorodnichenko
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 20, 13:
Distributional effects of payment card pricing and merchant cost pass-through in the United States and Canada Marie-Hélène Felt, Fumiko Hayashi, Joanna Stavins and Angelika Welte
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 20, 12:
The impact of regulatory stress tests on bank lending and Its macroeconomic consequences Falk Bräuning and José L. Fillat
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 20, 14:
Larceny in the product market a hidden tax? Osborne Jackson and Thu Tran
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 20, 15:
Household inflation expectations and consumer spending evidence from panel data Mary A. Burke and Ali Ozdagli
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 20, 6:
Estimating the cost function of connecticut public K-12 education implications for inequity and inadequacy in school spending Bo Zhao
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 20, 5:
Dynamic sales tax competition evidence from panel data at the border Melissa Gentry, Nadia Greenhalgh-Stanley, Shawn M. Rohlin and Jeffrey P. Thompson
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2020]
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no. 19, 19:
Output hysteresis and optimal monetary policy Vaishali Garga and Sanjay R. Singh
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 19, 1:
Family characteristics and macroeconomic factors in U.S. intragenerational family income mobility, 1978-2014 Katharine Bradbury
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 19, 2:
State disinvestment in higher education the impact on public research universities' patent applications Bo Zhao
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 19, 14:
Inflation thresholds and inattention Anat Bracha and Jenny Tang
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 19, 6:
Measuring household wealth in the panel study of income dynamics the role of retirement assets Daniel Cooper, Karen Dynan, and Hannah Rhodenhiser
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 19, 12:
Tariff passthrough at the border and at the store evidence from US trade policy Alberto Cavallo, Gita Gopinath, Brent Neiman, and Jenny Tang
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 19, 7:
How does liquidity affect consumer payment choice? Joanna Stavins
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 19, 5:
The impact of migration on earnings inequality Osborne Jackson
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 19, 9:
Trends in household portfolio composition Jesse Bricker, Kevin B. Moore, and Jeffrey Thompson
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 19, 10:
Consumption, credit, and the missing young Daniel Cooper, Olga Gorbachev, and María José Luengo-Prado
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 19, 13:
Accounting for racial wealth disparities in the United States Jeffrey P. Thompson and Gustavo A. Suarez
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 19, 11:
Technological innovation in mortgage underwriting and the growth in credit, 1985-2015 Christopher L. Foote, Lara Loewenstein, and Paul S. Willen
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 19, 3:
Fiscal multipliers in advanced and developing countries evidence from military spending Viacheslav Sheremirov and Sandra Spirovska
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 19, 18:
The optimal inflation target and the natural rate of interest Philippe Andrade, Jordi Galí, Hervé Le Bihan, and Julien Matheron
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 19, 17:
Delphic and Odyssean monetary policy shocks evidence from the euro area Philippe Andrade and Filippo Ferroni
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 19, 20:
Recent employment growth in cities, suburbs, and rural communities Benjamin K. Couillard and Christopher L. Foote
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 19, 4:
Estimating the marginal propensity to consume using the distributions of income, consumption and wealth Jonathan Fisher, David Johnson, Timothy Smeeding, and Jeffrey Thompson
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 19, 15:
Output spillovers from U.S. monetary policy the role of international trade and financial linkages Falk Bräuning and Viacheslav Sheremirov
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 19, 16:
How magic a bullet is machine learning for credit analysis? an exploration with FinTech lending data J. Christina Wang and Charles B. Perkins
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 19, 8:
Does getting a mortgage affect credit card use? Scott Fulford and Joanna Stavins
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2019]
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no. 18, 5:
The effects of changes in local-bank health on household consumption Daniel Cooper and Joe Peek
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2018]
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no. 18, 8:
Should the Fed regularly evaluate its monetary policy framework? Jeff Fuhrer, Giovanni P. Olivei, Eric S. Rosengren, and Geoffrey M.B. Tootell
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2018]
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no. 18, 1:
Disinvesting in the future? a comprehensive examination of the effects of state appropriations for public higher education Bo Zhao
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2018]
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no. 18, 2:
The supply side of discrimination evidence from the labor supply of Boston taxi drivers Osborne Jackson
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2018]
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no. 18, 4:
A concise test of rational consumer search Chloe Lee, María José Luengo-Prado, and Bent E. Sørensen
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2018]
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no. 18, 10:
The dollar during the Global Recession US monetary policy and the exorbitant duty Vania Stavrakeva and Jenny Tang
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2018]
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no. 18, 11:
What are the consequences of global banking for the international transmission of shocks? a quantitative analysis José L. Fillat, Stefania Garetto, and Arthur V. Smith
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2018]
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no. 18, 12:
The ups and downs of the gig economy, 2015-2017 Anat Bracha and Mary A. Burke
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2018]
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no. 18, 3:
News-driven uncertainty fluctuations Dongho Song and Jenny Tang
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2018]
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no. 18, 6:
The pricing of FX forward contracts micro evidence from banks' dollar hedging Puriya Abbassi and Falk Bräuning
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2018]
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no. 18, 7:
Credit card debt and consumer payment choice what can we learn from credit bureau data? Joanna Stavins
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2018]
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no. 18, 9:
Intrinsic expectations persistence evidence from professional and household survey expectations Jeff Fuhrer
[Boston, MA]: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2018]
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no. 17, 8:
The local aggregate effects of minimum wage increases Daniel Cooper, María José Luengo-Prado, and Jonathan A. Parker
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2017
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no. 17, 17:
Financial variables and macroeconomic forecast errors Michelle L. Barnes and Giovanni P. Olivei
Boston: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2017]
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no. 17, 16:
Portfolio choice with house value misperception Stefano Corradin, José L. Fillat, and Carles Vergara-Alert
Boston: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2017]
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no. 17, 1:
Population aging, labor demand, and the structure of wages Michael Papadopoulos, Margarita Patria, and Robert K. Triest
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2017
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no. 17, 2:
Measuring consumer expenditures with payment diaries measuring consumer expenditures with payment diaries Scott Schuh
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2017
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no. 16, 30:
The effect of changing employers' access to criminal histories on ex-offenders' labor market outcomes evidence from the 2010-2012 Massachusetts CORI Reform Osborne Jackson and Bo Zhao
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, February, 2017
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no. 17, 6:
International financial integration, crises, and monetary policy evidence from the Euro area interbank crises international financial integration, crises, and monetary policy : evidence from the Euro area interbank crises Puriya Abbassi, Falk Bräuning, Falko Fecht, and José-Luis Peydró
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2017
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no. 16, 26:
Heterogeneous exporters qualitative differences and qualitative similarities heterogeneous exporters : qualitative differences and qualitative similarities Camila Casas, Federico J. Díez, and Alejandra González
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, January 13, 2017
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no. 16, 31:
Does changing employers' access to criminal histories affect ex-offenders' recidivism? evidence from the 2010-2012 Massachusetts CORI Reform Osborne Jackson and Bo Zhao
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, February, 2017
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no. 16, 28:
The time-varying price of financial intermediation in the mortgage market Andreas Fuster, Stephanie Lo, and Paul S. Willen
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, January, 2017
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no. 17, 4:
Payment discounts and surcharges the role of consumer preferences payment discounts and surcharges : the role of consumer preferences Joanna Stavins and Huijia Wu
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2017
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no. 17, 3:
Banks' search for yield in the low interest rate environment a tale of regulatory adaptation banks' search for yield in the low interest rate environment : a tale of regulatory adaptation J. Christina Wang
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2017
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no. 17, 5:
Monetary policy and global banking Falk Bräuning and Victoria Ivashina
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2017
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no. 17, 7:
Integrated household surveys an assessment of U.S. methods and an innovation integrated household surveys : an assessment of U.S. methods and an innovation Krislert Samphantharak, Scott Schuh, and Robert M. Townsend
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2017
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no. 17, 11:
Inflation expectations and nonlinearities in the Phillips Curve Alexander Doser, Ricardo Nunes, Nikhil Rao, and Viacheslav Sheremirov
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2017
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no. 17, 14:
Credit card utilization and consumption over the life cycle and business cycle Scott L. Fulford and Scott Schuh
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2017
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no. 17, 15:
Monetary policy through production networks evidence from the stock market Ali Ozdagli and Michael Weber
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2017
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no. 17, 12:
FOMC communication and interest rate sensitivity to news Jenny Tang
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2017
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no. 17, 9:
U.S. monetary policy and emerging market credit cycles Falk Bräuning and Victoria Ivashina
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2017
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no. 17, 13:
Mortgage-default research and the recent foreclosure crisis Christopher L. Foote and Paul S. Willen
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2017
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no. 17, 10:
Transparency in state debt disclosure Bo Zhao and Wen Wang
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2017
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no. 16-2:
What determines the level of local business property taxes? David Merriman
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, January, 2016
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no. 16-3:
A dynamic network model of the unsecured interbank lending market Francisco Blasques, Falk Bräuning, and Iman van Lelyveld
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, April, 2016
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no. 16-4:
Optimal time-consistent government debt maturity Davide Debortoli, Ricardo Nunes, and Pierre Yared
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, May 17, 2016
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no. 16-1:
Moving to a new job the role of home equity, debt, and access to credit Yuliya Demyanyk, Dmytro Hryshko, Maria José Luengo-Prado, and Bent E. Sørensen
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, January 25, 2016
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no. 16, 8:
Levels and trends in the income mobility of U.S. families, 1977 - 2012 Katharine Bradbury
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, July 2016
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no. 16, 11:
Does Fed policy reveal a ternary mandate? Joe Peek, Eric S. Rosengren, and Geoffrey M.B. Tootell
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, September 2016
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no. 16-13:
The dynamic factor network model with an application to global credit risk Falk Bräuning and Siem Jan Koopman
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, October 31, 2016
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no. 16-15:
You can be too thin (but not too tall) social desirability bias in self-reports of weight and height Mary A. Burke and Katherine G. Carman
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, August 2016
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no. 16-16:
Business complexity and risk management evidence from operational risk events in U.S. bank holding companies Anna Chernobai, Ali K. Ozdagli, and Jianlin Wang
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, October 2016
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no. 16, 19:
Are there social spillovers in consumers' security assessments of payment instruments? Charles M. Kahn, José M. Liñares-Zegarra, and Joanna Stavins
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2016
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no. 16, 21:
Exchange rates and the yield curve exchange rates and the yield curve Vania Stavrakeva and Jenny Tang
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2016
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no. 16, 22:
Lending to unhealthy firms in Japan during the Lost Decade distinguishing between technical and financial health Suparna Chakraborty and Joe Peek
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2016
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no. 16, 23:
Investment decisions and negative interest rates Anat Bracha
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2016
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no. 16, 24:
Did life insurers benefit from TARP or regulatory forbearance during the financial crisis of 2008-2009? Michelle L. Barnes
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2016
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no. 16, 10:
"No more credit score" employer credit check bans and signal substitution Robert Clifford and Daniel Shoag
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, March 2016
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no. 16-12:
Cross-sectional patterns of mortgage debt during the housing boom evidence and implications Christopher L. Foote, Lara Loewenstein, and Paul S. Willen
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, November 17, 2016
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no. 16, 18:
Monetary policy and regional house-price appreciation Daniel Cooper, María José Luengo-Prado, and Giovanni Olivei
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2016
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no. 16, 20:
The influence of gender and income on the household division of financial responsibility Marcin Hitczenko
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2016
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no. 16-7:
Relationship lending in the interbank market and the price of liquidity Falk Bräuning and Falko Fecht
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, July 14, 2016
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no. 16, 9:
Downskilling changes in employer skill requirements over the business cycle Alicia Sasser Modestino, Daniel Shoag, and Joshua Ballance
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, February 29, 2016
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no. 16, 17:
Household formation over time evidence from two cohorts of young adults Daniel Cooper and María José Luengo-Prado
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2016
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no. 16, 25:
Firms in international trade Federico J. Díez, Jesse Mora, and Alan C. Spearot
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2016
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no. 16, 27:
Show me the money the monetary policy risk premium show me the money : the monetary policy risk premium Ali K. Ozdagli and Mihail Velikov
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, December 2016
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no. 16, 29:
Who counts as employed? informal work, employment status, and labor market slack Anat Bracha and Mary A. Burke
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, December, 2016
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no. 16-5:
The effect of demographics on payment behavior panel data with sample selection Joanna Stavins
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, June 7, 2016
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no. 16-6:
The credit card debt puzzle the role of preferences, credit risk, and financial literacy Olga Gorbachev and María José Luengo-Prado
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, July 7, 2016
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no. 16-14:
The effects of government spending on real exchange rates evidence from military spending panel data Wataru Miyamoto, Viacheslav Sheremirov, and Thuy Lan Nguyen
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, October 2016
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no. 15-15:
The final countdown the effect of monetary policy during "Wait-for-It" and reversal periods Ali Ozdagli
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, September 2015
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no. 15-16:
Monetary policy and exchange rate dynamics Vania Stavrakeva and Jenny Tang
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, October 2015
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no. 15-17:
Consumer revolving credit and debt over the life cycle and business cycle Scott L. Fulford and Scott Schuh
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, [2015]
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no. 15-18:
Does immigration crowd natives into or out of higher education? Osborne Jackson
Boston, MA: Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, October 2015