Finance
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Years granted:
2014, 2015
Macroeconomic Policy over the Business Cycle
This research project provides guidance to policymakers for designing policies that are able to bring economies out of recessions by identifying the best policies to fight unemployment and stabilize the business cycle while alleviating inequality.
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Years granted:
2014, 2015
The Birth of the Deutschmark: A social and financial history of German Currency Reform, 1945-1951
This research project provides a better understanding of the processes that accompanied the reforms of the Austrian schilling in 1947 and the birth of the deutschmark in 1948 by merging archival sources with financial data from banks and markets and comparing the two reforms.
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Years granted:
2014, 2015
Safe Assets and the Evolution of Financial Information
This research project brings together ideas from the literature on robustness in macroeconomics, network theory, and evolutionary game theory to study the way in which perceptions of safe asset status evolve among financial market participants.
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Years granted:
2014, 2015
Shadow Banks in China: Causes, Impacts and Policy Options
This research project explores the causes and consequences of the rise of China’s shadow banks based on the Modern Money Theory and its extension on the analysis on modern financial systems.
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Years granted:
2014, 2015
Financially Constrained Arbitrage and Cross-Market Contagion
This research project develops a theoretical framework to examine the relation between arbitrage capital and the price properties of different asset markets.
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Years granted:
2014, 2015
Institutional Investors and the Offshore Hedge Fund Industry: Investigating Patterns of Linkage, Organization, and Governance
This research project combines interdisciplinary expertise with a wholly unique database on hedge funds compiled by the Foundation for Fund Governance to examine the organization and governance of the offshore hedge fund industry.
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Years granted:
2014, 2015
The Marginal Value of Cash and the Great Depression
This research project employs a new theory and innovative empirical analysis as a new lens for understanding financial instability and financial crises, focusing on the Great Depression.
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Years granted:
2014, 2015
The Rise of Federal Credit Programs in the United States
This research project investigates the rise of federal credit programs in the United States, leading to a better understanding of the development of federal credit programs.
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Years granted:
2012, 2013, 2014, 2015
Heterogeneous Expectations and Financial Crises (HExFiCs)
This research project develops a new behavioral paradigm of heterogeneous expectations that can help explain the sources of financial and macroeconomic instability and find possible policy remedies.
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Years granted:
2012, 2013, 2014, 2015
Financial Institutions: A Study of Real Linkages and Policy Influence
This research project studies how the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision and the International Swaps and Derivatives Association operate and the factors that help shape the extent to which they are able to ensure financial stability from a public-interest standpoint.
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Years granted:
2012, 2013, 2014, 2015
Financial Globalization and Macroeconomic Policy
This research project establishes the conditions under which international capital flows are a force for stability, thereby improving the capacity for macroeconomic policy to avoid large boom-bust cycles.
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Years granted:
2012, 2013, 2014, 2015
Capital Controls and the International Monetary System
This research project develops a rigorous new theoretical way to study controls of international capital flows and determine their optimal magnitude using a promising new empirical methodology.
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Years granted:
2015
Income Distribution, Asset Prices, and Aggregate Demand Formation, 1850-2010: A Post-Keynesian Approach to Historical Macroeconomic Data
This research project uses macroeconomic data going back to the mid-19th century to analyze issues such as the relation between income distribution and economic growth; and how debt, asset prices, and growth moved together the last 160 years.
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Years granted:
2013, 2014, 2015
Computational Platforms for Agent-Based Financial Models
This research project constructs a broad set of software tools designed to better facilitate the understanding and comparative features of various types of agent-based finical markets.
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Years granted:
2013, 2014, 2015
Modeling Minsky's Financial Instability Hypothesis - A Dynamical Systems Approach
This research project improves the mathematical capabilities of non-Neoclassical economics and uses modern techniques from nonlinear dynamical systems to model the expansion and contraction of credit and its effect on real economic output and asset prices.