MegaCatálogo Bibliográfico
Centro de Documentación. FCEyS. UNMdP

- Recursos bibliográficos en papel y digitales -
- libros, artículos de revistas, ponencias de eventos, etc. -

» Resultado: 4 registros

Registro 1 de 4
Autor: Sala-i-Martin, Xavier - 
Título: La competitividad y la economía argentina
Fuente: Boletín Informativo Techint, n.321. Techint
Páginas: pp. 9-28
Año: sept.-dic. 2006
Palabras clave: COMPETITIVIDAD | ANALISIS ECONOMICO | METODOLOGIA | CRECIMIENTO ECONOMICO | OFERTA Y DEMANDA | MERCADO | ESTABILIDAD | POLITICA MONETARIA | ESTUDIOS DE PAISES | INVESTIGACION Y DESARROLLO |
Solicitar por: HEMEROTECA B + datos de Fuente
Registro 2 de 4
Autor: Mulligan, Casey B. - Sala-i-Martin, Xavier - 
Título: Extensive margins and the demand for money at low interest rates
Fuente: Journal of Political Economy. v.108, n.5. The University of Chicago Press
Páginas: pp. 961-991
Año: Oct. 2000
Resumen: We argue that the relevant monetary decision for the majority of U.S. households is not the fraction of assets to be held in interest-bearing form, but whether to hold any such assets at all (we call this "the decision to adopt" the financial technology). We show that the key variable governing the adoption decision is the product of the interest rate times the total amount of assets. This implies that the interest elasticity of household money demand at low interest rates can be estimated from the variation in asset holdings in a cross section of households rather than historical interest rate variations. We do so with the 1989 Survey of Consumer Finances. We find that (a) the elasticity of money demand is very small when the interest rate is small, (b) the probability that a household holds any amount of interest-bearing assets is positively related to the level of financial assets, and (c) the cost of adopting financial technologies is negatively related to participation in a pension program. At interest rates of 5 percent, roughly one-half of the elasticity can be attributed to the Allais-Baumol-Tobin or intensive margin and half to the new adopters or extensive margin. The intensive margin is less important at lower interest rates and more important at higher interest rates. Finally, we argue that ignoring extensive margins may lead to an empirically important overestimation of the cost of inflation at low interest rates
Solicitar por: HEMEROTECA J + datos de Fuente
Registro 3 de 4
Autor: Sala-i-Martin, Xavier - 
Título: I Just Ran Two Million Regressions
Fuente: American Economic Review. v.87, n.2. American Economic Association
Páginas: pp. 178-83
Año: May 1997
Solicitar por: HEMEROTECA A + datos de Fuente
Registro 4 de 4
Autor: Barro, Robert-J - Mankiw, N-Gregory - Sala-i-Martin, Xavier - 
Título: Capital Mobility in Neoclassical Models of Growth
Fuente: American Economic Review. v.85, n.1. American Economic Association
Páginas: pp. 103-15
Año: Mar. 1995
Resumen: The neoclassical growth model accords with empirical evidence on convergence if capital is viewed broadly to include human investments, so that diminishing returns to capital set in slowly, and if differences in government policies or other variables create substantial differences in steady-state positions. However, open-economy versions of the theory predict higher rates of convergence than those observed empirically. The authors show that the open-economy model conforms with the evidence if an economy can borrow to finance only a portion of its capital, for example, if human capital must be financed by domestic savings.
Solicitar por: HEMEROTECA A + datos de Fuente

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