This paper developes a small open economy model in which domestic resource shocks play a vital role in driving the dynamics of the major macroeconomic aggregates. Households rent capital and labour to firms and have access to an international bond market. The model is calibrated to recent Icelandic data and simulated under two alternative exchange rate regimes: floating rates, and monetary union membership. It is found that by entering a larger currency area, the volatility of the real exchange rate, real wages and consumption are sharply reduced, but output and employment are seen to be more volatile. Smoother consumption renders monetary union marginally Pareto superior to floating. Under monetary union and low inflation, slight nominal...
In the case of small open economies like Iceland, exchange rate stability is one of the key determin...
An open economy macromodel, calibrated to typical institutions and shocks of a populous emerging mar...
This paper analyses the role of real and nominal shocks in explaining business cycles in a small ope...
A floating exchange rate combined with a clear inflation target can be a powerful stabilizer even if...
We compare two small open economics, Iceland and Ireland, that experienced a capital inflow through...
This paper analysis the appropriate exchange rate arrangement for Iceland, given its structural char...
Summary. This is an extended working paper version of the paper that appeared in Economic Theory. It...
This paper compares alternative monetary policy rules in a small open economy that experiences inter...
In this thesis the welfare effects of exchange rate intervention in small open economies will be exa...
This paper investigates how a small country fares in an exchange— rate union if that country is subj...
We compare risk sharing in response to demand and supply shocks in four types of currency unions: se...
The paper develops a New Keynesian Small Open Economy Model characterized by external habit formatio...
This market commentary highlights the difficulties that highly open economies such as Island face wh...
Abstract: I study the behavior of the nominal exchange rate in a small open economy with wage rigidi...
The paper addresses whether or not the exchange rate or some other dimension of the external side of...
In the case of small open economies like Iceland, exchange rate stability is one of the key determin...
An open economy macromodel, calibrated to typical institutions and shocks of a populous emerging mar...
This paper analyses the role of real and nominal shocks in explaining business cycles in a small ope...
A floating exchange rate combined with a clear inflation target can be a powerful stabilizer even if...
We compare two small open economics, Iceland and Ireland, that experienced a capital inflow through...
This paper analysis the appropriate exchange rate arrangement for Iceland, given its structural char...
Summary. This is an extended working paper version of the paper that appeared in Economic Theory. It...
This paper compares alternative monetary policy rules in a small open economy that experiences inter...
In this thesis the welfare effects of exchange rate intervention in small open economies will be exa...
This paper investigates how a small country fares in an exchange— rate union if that country is subj...
We compare risk sharing in response to demand and supply shocks in four types of currency unions: se...
The paper develops a New Keynesian Small Open Economy Model characterized by external habit formatio...
This market commentary highlights the difficulties that highly open economies such as Island face wh...
Abstract: I study the behavior of the nominal exchange rate in a small open economy with wage rigidi...
The paper addresses whether or not the exchange rate or some other dimension of the external side of...
In the case of small open economies like Iceland, exchange rate stability is one of the key determin...
An open economy macromodel, calibrated to typical institutions and shocks of a populous emerging mar...
This paper analyses the role of real and nominal shocks in explaining business cycles in a small ope...