Friday, January 17, 2025
On cross-country:
Working papers and conferences:
On the US—developments on house prices, rent, permits and mortgage:
On the US—other developments:
On Australia and New Zealand:
On other countries:
On cross-country:
Working papers and conferences:
On the US—developments on house prices,
Posted by 5:00 AM
atLabels: Global Housing Watch
Thursday, January 16, 2025
From a paper by Monika Junicke, Jakub Mateju, Haroon Mumtaz, and Angeliki Theophilopoulou:
“This paper uses administrative labour market data from Czechia to investigate the heterogeneous effects of technology shocks. Using a FAVAR, the shock is identified using medium run restrictions `a la Uhlig (2004b). Workers on low wages reduce their hours in response to the shock, while the shock has a positive effect on hours for workers with wages at and above the median. Analysis of industrial and demographic groups indicates that the latter group is likely to consist of males, to be educated or to work in services.”
From a paper by Monika Junicke, Jakub Mateju, Haroon Mumtaz, and Angeliki Theophilopoulou:
“This paper uses administrative labour market data from Czechia to investigate the heterogeneous effects of technology shocks. Using a FAVAR, the shock is identified using medium run restrictions `a la Uhlig (2004b). Workers on low wages reduce their hours in response to the shock, while the shock has a positive effect on hours for workers with wages at and above the median.
Posted by 1:20 PM
atLabels: Inclusive Growth
From The News:
“The distinction between market-friendly and business-friendly economic policies is critical in shaping economic growth and inclusiveness. Our government must recognise this difference to ensure that policies benefit not just a select group of businesses but society at large.
Planners must understand the nuances between these policy approaches. Market-friendly policies focus on creating competitive markets with minimal government intervention, prioritising efficiency and resource allocation driven by market forces. However, this approach carries risks of concentrating benefits among established players, potentially fostering monopolies or oligopolies.
In contrast, business-friendly policies aim to support businesses of all sizes, including small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and startups. These policies encourage entrepreneurship and innovation while fostering a level playing field through regulations and incentives. The ultimate goal is broad-based economic growth that benefits all segments of society.
Pakistan’s existing economic policies pose significant challenges. These often favour large corporations or well-connected businesses, sidelining SMEs and participants in the informal sector. Regulatory inefficiencies stemming from governance flaws, inconsistent enforcement and lack of transparency create uncertainty that deters smaller businesses. Access to capital remains a critical issue for SMEs. High credit costs and limited financial access hinder inclusive growth. Furthermore, weak infrastructure, including inadequate transportation, energy and digital access, disproportionately affects smaller enterprises.”
Continue reading here.
From The News:
“The distinction between market-friendly and business-friendly economic policies is critical in shaping economic growth and inclusiveness. Our government must recognise this difference to ensure that policies benefit not just a select group of businesses but society at large.
Planners must understand the nuances between these policy approaches. Market-friendly policies focus on creating competitive markets with minimal government intervention, prioritising efficiency and resource allocation driven by market forces.
Posted by 1:17 PM
atLabels: Inclusive Growth
From a paper by Washingtone Onyango, Socrates Majune, and Patricia Naluwooza:
“This study analyzes the effect of China’s import dominance on Africa’s structural transformation, measured through the Shapley decomposition approach. A pooled mean group Autoregressive Distributed Lag (PMG-ARDL) model is analyzed using panel data from 1995–2018 for 21 countries. We find that Chinese imports of goods and services, like those from the rest of the world, increase Africa’s structural transformation in the long-run. However, the magnitude of the coefficient for China is larger than that of the rest of the world for both goods and services (total). The Chinese impact on Africa’s structural transformation is mainly through capital goods and other commercial services (such as ICT, financial, and construction), whose coefficients are larger than those of the rest of the world. Imposing barriers on Chinese imports is not a viable option for African countries. Instead, they should pursue policies that enrich the manufacturing sector, including adopting an Africa-wide trade agreement.”
From a paper by Washingtone Onyango, Socrates Majune, and Patricia Naluwooza:
“This study analyzes the effect of China’s import dominance on Africa’s structural transformation, measured through the Shapley decomposition approach. A pooled mean group Autoregressive Distributed Lag (PMG-ARDL) model is analyzed using panel data from 1995–2018 for 21 countries. We find that Chinese imports of goods and services, like those from the rest of the world, increase Africa’s structural transformation in the long-run.
Posted by 1:15 PM
atLabels: Inclusive Growth
From a paper by Yongjian Lyu, Heling Yi, Mo Yang, Yihan Zou, Ding Li, Zhilong Qin:
“Financial uncertainty shocks are emerging as potential drivers for the spillovers of risk originating from the oil market into the stock market, with the increasing financialization of the oil market. This paper explores this phenomenon and provides compelling findings. First, the oil market generates substantial risk spillovers to the stock market, reaching a peak amid the COVID-19 crisis. Second, according to the backtesting results, the ΔCoVaR values derived from the Student-t Copula model reflect the true level of such risk spillovers. Third, shocks to financial uncertainty increase systemic risk by causing risk to spill over from the oil to the stock market, with larger spillovers occurring during periods of increased economic vulnerability. Finally, financial uncertainty shocks are the fundamental drivers of variance changes in risk spillovers, making a greater contribution than macroeconomic uncertainty shocks, according to the time-varying forecast error variance decomposition.”
From a paper by Yongjian Lyu, Heling Yi, Mo Yang, Yihan Zou, Ding Li, Zhilong Qin:
“Financial uncertainty shocks are emerging as potential drivers for the spillovers of risk originating from the oil market into the stock market, with the increasing financialization of the oil market. This paper explores this phenomenon and provides compelling findings. First, the oil market generates substantial risk spillovers to the stock market, reaching a peak amid the COVID-19 crisis.
Posted by 1:13 PM
atLabels: Energy & Climate Change
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