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Working Paper No. 356
Asset Poverty in the United States, 1984–1999
Using PSID data for the years 1984 to 1999, we estimate the level and severity of asset poverty. Our results indicate that the share of asset-poor households remained almost the same and the severity of poverty increased during this period, despite the growth in the economy and the financial markets. The race, age, education, and […] -
Working Paper No. 355
Can Monetary Policy Affect the Real Economy?
Current monetary policy involves the manipulation of the central bank interest rate (the repo rate), with the specific objective of achieving the goal(s) of monetary policy. The latter is normally the inflation rate, although in a number of instances this may include the level of economic activity (the monetary policy of the United States’ Federal […] -
Working Paper No. 354
Should Banks Be Narrowed?
Over the past 70 years, a proposal to narrow the scope of banks has emerged more and more frequently in financial debates and research. Narrow banking would prevent deposit-issuing banks from lending to the private sector and restrict nonbank intermediaries from funding investments with demand deposits. Proponents of narrow banking defend it as a step […] -
Working Paper No. 353
Managed Care, Physician Incentives, and Norms of Medical Practice
The incentive contracts that managed care organizations write with physicians have generated considerable controversy. Critics fear that if informational asymmetries inhibit patients from directly assessing the quality of care provided by their physician, competition will lead to a “race to the bottom” in which managed care plans induce physicians to offer only minimal levels of […] -
Working Paper No. 352
Critical Realism and the Political Economy of the Euro
This paper is concerned with two issues. First, it discusses some of the main problems and inferences the methodological approach of critical realism raises for empirical work in economics, while considering an approach adopted to try to overcome these problems. Second, it provides a concrete illustration of these arguments, with reference to our recent research […] -
Report No. 3
Report September 2002
Newly released Congressional Budget Office figures show that the government’s fiscal stance in 2000 was tighter than at any time in the previous 40 years, with imbalances financed in recent years by dramatic increases in the level of private debt—a trend that cannot be sustained indefinitely. Summarized in this issue of the Report, the Institute’s […] -
Public Policy Brief Highlight No. 68
Optimal CRA Reform
At issue in the debate over the renewal of the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) of 1977 are the various yardsticks regulators use to judge whether individual institutions are meeting the credit and service needs of low- and moderate-income (LMI) communities. Based on careful examination of new CRA data and assessments of comments by selected stakeholders, […] -
Working Paper No. 351
Race, Ethnicity, and the Gender-poverty Gap
We use data from the Current Population Survey (CPS 1994-2001) to document the relationship between gender-specific demographic variations and the gender-poverty gap among eight racial/ethnic groups. We find that black and Puerto Rican women experience a double disadvantage owing to being both women and members of a minority group. As compared with whites, however, gender […] -
Public Policy Brief No. 68
Optimal CRA Reform
At issue in the debate over the renewal of the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) of 1977 are the various yardsticks regulators use to judge whether individual institutions are meeting the credit and service needs of low- and moderate-income (LMI) communities. Based on careful examination of new CRA data and assessments of comments by selected stakeholders, […] -
Working Paper No. 350
Polish and Italian Schooling Then, Mexican Schooling Now?
This paper relies on data from the census and the Current Population Survey (CPS) to compare levels of education attained by second-generation young people from important immigrant groups during the last great wave of immigration and by second-generation Mexican Americans today. In addition, it provides evidence, based on the CPS, about the earnings relative to […] -
Working Paper No. 349
State Policies and the Warranted Growth Rate
This paper raises questions about austerity policies by investigating the effects of the state’s tax and expenditure policies on the warranted growth rate. It proposes two mechanisms to raise the warranted growth rate in the event that there is long-run unemployment. First, it incorporates Pasinetti’s taxation function into Harrod’s growth framework to show how, with […] -
Press Release
Nobel Laureate Joseph E. Stiglitz and Former Federal Reserve Board Governor Janet Yellen Join Levy Economics Institute Board of Governors