SSRN

Trust in the ECB – insights from the Consumer Expectations Survey

Retrieved on: 
tisdag, april 23, 2024

This article shows that trust in the ECB needs to be analysed and understood as a multifaceted concept. Analysis of data from the Consumer Expectations Survey shows that trust is not a matter of “yes” or “no”

Key Points: 


This article shows that trust in the ECB needs to be analysed and understood as a multifaceted concept. Analysis of data from the Consumer Expectations Survey shows that trust is not a matter of “yes” or “no”

Is home bias biased? New evidence from the investment fund sector

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torsdag, april 18, 2024
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Key Points: 

    Business as usual: bank climate commitments, lending, and engagement

    Retrieved on: 
    tisdag, april 2, 2024
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    Key Points: 

      Ai for Alpha Integrates New Generative Artificial Intelligence into Its Investment Process

      Retrieved on: 
      torsdag, februari 15, 2024

      Ai for Alpha , a leading fintech company specializing in leveraging machine learning for advanced investment strategies, announces the integration of Gen AI into its asset management models.

      Key Points: 
      • Ai for Alpha , a leading fintech company specializing in leveraging machine learning for advanced investment strategies, announces the integration of Gen AI into its asset management models.
      • “We are excited by this innovative approach as it represents a significant advancement in optimizing investment processes through the application of generative AI technologies," says Beatrice Guez, CEO.
      • "Specifically, Generative AI can synthesize and interpret news and investor sentiments from multiple sources and translate them into actionable investment decisions.”
        By utilizing advanced technologies like RAG (Retrieval Augmented Generation), generative AI can analyze a variety of sources, offering an up-to-date perspective on investor sentiment and market trends.
      • Ai For Alpha is a leading provider of AI-powered market signals and investment models to asset managers and large financial institutions in Europe, the Americas, and Asia.

      Philip R. Lane: Euro area international financial flows: analytical insights and measurement challenges

      Retrieved on: 
      tisdag, februari 13, 2024

      We document how gas price fluctuations have a heterogeneous pass-through to euro area prices depending on the underlying shock driving them.

      Key Points: 
      • We document how gas price fluctuations have a heterogeneous pass-through to euro area prices depending on the underlying shock driving them.
      • Supply shocks, moreover, are found to pass through to all components of euro area inflation – producer prices, wages and core inflation, which has implications for monetary policy.

      Gas price shocks and euro area inflation

      Retrieved on: 
      tisdag, februari 13, 2024
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      We document

      Key Points: 
        • We document
          how gas price fluctuations have a heterogeneous pass-through to euro area prices
          depending on the underlying shock driving them.
        • How do gas price shocks feed through to euro area
          inflation, and is the pass-through shock-dependent?
        • We analyse the importance of gas price shocks
          for euro area inflation in two steps.
        • We identify three structural shocks driving European gas prices,
          inspired by the literature on oil but tailored to the European gas market: (i) a gas supply
          shock, which reduces the supply of natural gas to the European market, increases the
          gas price and lowers gas inventories; (ii) an economic activity shock, which lifts demand
          for gas due to higher economic production, and finally (iii) a shock to gas inventories,
          when gas prices are driven by precautionary demand by gas companies.
        • First, all three identified shocks are
          important drivers of gas price dynamics, but they differ in how persistently they push

          ECB Working Paper Series No 2905

          2

          up gas prices.

        • The effect on euro area HICP of a shock to gas supply is more
          persistent and somewhat higher than when gas prices are driven by economic activity
          shocks.
        • A final key finding is that the pass-through of gas market shocks to euro area inflation
          appears non-linear.
        • The unprecedented volatility of gas prices
          contributed to the inflation problem in the euro area, with the gas price shocks feeding
          through producer prices, wages and persistently lifting core inflation.
        • More expensive
          energy contributed substantially to the rise in inflation in Europe during 2022.2

          Figure 1: Gas price and euro area Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices.

        • How do gas price shocks feed through to euro area
          inflation, and is the pass-through shock-dependent?
        • For instance, about 75% of gas imports to the euro area arrives
          through pipelines, making gas imports difficult to substitute and gas markets subject to
          3

          See for example the evidence by Rubaszek and Uddin (2020) for the US economy.

        • We analyse the importance of gas price shocks for
          euro area inflation in two steps.
        • We identify three structural shocks driving European gas prices,
          inspired by the literature on oil but tailored to the European gas market: (i) a gas supply
          shock, which reduces the supply of natural gas to the European market, increases the
          gas price and lowers gas inventories; (ii) an economic activity shock, which lifts demand
          for gas due to higher economic production, and finally (iii) a shock to gas inventories,
          when gas prices are driven by precautionary demand by gas companies.
        • First, all three identified shocks are
          important drivers of gas price dynamics, but they differ in how persistently they push
          up gas prices.
        • But when gas prices are driven by
          inventory demand shocks, the price effect typically dies out within one quarter.
        • A final key finding is that the pass-through of gas market shocks to euro area inflation appears non-linear.
        • The unprecedented volatility of gas prices
          contributed to the inflation problem in the euro area, with the gas price shocks feeding
          through producer prices, wages and persistently lifting core inflation.
        • (2022) and Alessandri and Gazzani (2023) identify gas supply shocks using VAR models,
          finding that gas price shocks lead to persistent increases in headline inflation.14 Ba?bura
          et al.
        • (2023) find positive effects of gas price shocks on core inflation in a BVAR for
          the euro area that includes one type of gas shock along a longer list of macroeconomic
          shocks.
        • 3.1

          Data

          For the gas market BVAR model, we use gas quantities, gas prices, gas inventories and
          euro area industrial production, as displayed in Figure 2.

        • (2015) to optimize

          ECB Working Paper Series No 2905

          13

          the posterior distribution.16 The vector Y includes the European gas quantity proxy, gas
          inventories, the European gas price benchmark and euro area industrial production.

        • As demand for gas increases, the gas price also rises
          while inventories fall as agents use gas in storage to partially satisfy higher demand.
        • Shocks to gas
          quantities driven by gas supply or inventory shocks tend to revert to pre-shock levels after
          around five to seven months, while economic activity shocks lead to a more long-lived
          increase in gas demand.19 Dynamics in gas inventories are more similar across shocks.
        • 3.4

          Historical events in the European gas market

          Before analysing the transmission of the different types of gas shocks to euro area prices,
          we show how the model interprets the unprecedented gas price rise in 2022 in terms of
          driving factors, and compare it with previous historical episodes of heightened gas price
          volatility as a way of validating the model.

        • Inventory shocks play a
          slightly smaller role, accounting for 17% of gas quantity and 23% of gas price fluctuations
          while the residual component (i.e.
        • 4

          Pass-through of gas price shocks to consumer prices

          The pass-through of gas price shocks to inflation is likely to be multi-faceted.

        • We first consider four outcome variables y: the European gas price, euro area HICP,
          core HICP and energy HICP.
        • Third, depending on the driving factor, gas price increases can pass through to core
          inflation in the euro area.
        • The results underline that gas price shocks can have important implications for inflation in the euro area ? depending on the driving factor of higher gas prices.
        • Casoli, C., Manera, M., and Valenti, D. ?Energy shocks in the euro area: disentangling
          the pass-through from oil and gas prices to inflation?.

      Demographics, labor market power and the spatial equilibrium

      Retrieved on: 
      tisdag, februari 13, 2024

      Abstract

      Key Points: 
        • Abstract
          This paper studies how demographics affect aggregate labor market power, the urban wage
          premium and the spatial concentration of population.
        • I develop a quantitative spatial model
          in which labor market competitiveness depends on the demographic composition of the local
          workforce.
        • If these factors differ across workers, labor market power has a role to
          play in explaining wage inequality.
        • This paper contributes to the literature on differences in labor market power by analyzing a
          new dimension of heterogeneity: demographics.
        • Since older workers are less mobile in terms of
          switching workplaces, firms have more labor market power over older workers.
        • I start by estimating labor market power by measuring the sensitivity of worker turnover to
          the wage paid.
        • I find a strong
          role of demographics in determining the degree of labor market power enjoyed by firms.
        • Next, I provide evidence of the importance of differences in labor market power for spatial
          wage inequality.
        • To explore the consequences of labor market sorting, I build a spatial general equilibrium
          model in which labor market competitiveness depends on the demographic composition of the

          ECB Working Paper Series No 2906

          2

          local workforce.

        • If these factors differ across workers, labor market power has a role to
          play in explaining wage inequality.
        • In
          the model, geographic sorting by age matters and leads to higher labor market power in rural
          areas, which implies an urban wage premium that is 4% larger than with uniform labor supply
          elasticities.
        • I follow Manning (2013) and estimate labor market power by measuring the sensitivity of worker
          turnover to the wage paid.
        • Bachmann et al., 2021; Ahlfeldt et al., 2022a; Berger et al.,
          2022) that nest a monopsonistic labor market in a spatial general equilibrium model (Redding
          and Rossi-Hansberg, 2017).
        • As firms have more labor market power
          over older workers, they face an upward-sloping labor supply curve that is less elastic in regions
          with an older workforce.
        • Firms choose in which labor market to operate in the sense that there is free
          entry at fixed costs into all locations.
        • How are differences in labor market competitiveness across space sustained in spatial equilibrium?
        • I use the model to quantify the importance of heterogeneity
          in labor market power for the urban wage premium and the spatial concentration of population.
        • My work is complementary to but quite different
          from this paper since I argue that population aging increases labor market power rather than
          product market power.
        • By analyzing the effects of a changing age composition of the workforce in the context
          of labor market power, I relate to literature on the labor market effects of population aging.
        • ECB Working Paper Series No 2906

          7

          after controlling for age, differences in labor market power between East and West Germany
          vanish.

        • They conclude that higher
          concentration is associated with higher labor market power (as in the model of Jarosch et al.,
          forthcoming).
        • I offer an alternative explanation why labor market power differs across regions:
          Since denser regions have a younger workforce, workers are more mobile in terms of switching
          jobs which implies lower labor market power of firms.
        • In this case, I infer a
          high labor supply elasticity and low labor market power of firms.
        • I contribute to this growing debate by
          quantifying differences in labor market power across worker groups and their effects on regional
          inequality.
        • While the model shows how demographics affect labor market power, the urban wage premium and agglomeration, one fundamental question remains open for future research: What
          are the policy implications of (differences in) labor market power?

      The macroeconomic effects of global supply chain reorientation

      Retrieved on: 
      lördag, februari 10, 2024
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      We analyse the macroeconomic

      Key Points: 
        • We analyse the macroeconomic
          effects of supply chain reorientation through localisation policies, using a global dynamic
          general equilibrium model.
        • While arguments about comparative advantage, the potential forgone benefits of international specialisation and industry- and product-specific disruptions are familiar, there is less
          analysis on the macroeconomic effects of supply chain changes resulting from localisation policies.
        • The large sensitivity of the global economy to the recent supply chain shocks suggests that
          the international trade reconfiguration implied by localisation policies could also have sizable
          impacts on key macroeconomic variables such as output, employment and inflation.
        • Thus, localisation focuses on the
          goods in our model most closely related to global supply chains.
        • Retaliation also attenuates any positive effects from
          reshoring on output and implies a reduction in the volume of overall international trade.
        • This finding calls for limiting the scope of reshoring, such as by focusing on vital goods that are
          most susceptible to supply chain disruptions.
        • Either that, or the economic costs are considered a worthwhile trade-off for an increase
          in security of supply, for example.
        • While arguments about comparative advantage, the potential forgone benefits of international specialisation and industry- and product-specific disruptions are familiar, there is less
          analysis on the macroeconomic effects of supply chain changes resulting from localisation policies.
        • Recent supply chain shocks have had large effects, with disruptions in 2021 estimated
          to have reduced euro area GDP by around two percent and doubled the rate of manufacturing producer inflation (Celasun et al., 2022).
        • To analyse this issue, we simulate a (partial) reshoring of production back to Europe in
          a global dynamic general equilibrium framework.
        • Thus,
          localisation focuses on the goods in our model most closely related to global supply chains.3 We
          model reshoring through a direct change to the export goods? production-function parameters.
        • Since reshoring
          effectively shortens the supply chain, the sum of markups along the chain falls.
        • This means that imports that are at the end of the supply chain (i.e.
        • In particular, our work relates to papers examining the potential for countries to reduce
          their exposure to global supply chains.
        • (2021) demonstrate that reduced reliance on foreign inputs does not mitigate pandemicinduced contractions in labour supply.
        • (2021) find no evidence of a relationship
          between global value chain integration and macroeconomic volatility.
        • This dynamic, along with factors such as natural disasters, climate-change
          induced volatility and terrorism mean that supply chain disruptions could be a new normal
          (Grossman et al., 2021).
        • Our work contributes to the literature providing dynamic general equilibrium analyses of
          protectionist policies, in particular those using global macroeconomic models to quantify trade
          policy changes.
        • (2008) analyse the effect of a rise in protectionism in response
          to rising global trade imbalances.
        • Linde? and Pescatori (2019) find that although the macroeconomic costs of a
          trade war are substantial, a fully symmetric retaliation is the best response.
        • (2020) consider a rich input-output structure and demonstrate that closer integration amplifies
          the adverse effects of protectionist trade policies.
        • Several recent studies have also examined the economic effects of a global trade fragmentation.
        • First, we modify a dynamic general
          equilibrium model of the global economy in order to analyse the transmission of localisation
          policies.
        • This allows for a comprehensive treatment of cross-border macroeconomic interdependences and spillovers between the different regions.
        • 4

          There is, however, substantial cross-country heterogeneity in terms of impact, with small open economies
          (SOEs) reliant on global supply chains more affected.

        • ECB Working Paper Series No 2903

          7

          Second, we are able to assess both long-run effects and the transition dynamics of localisation
          policies.

        • Our model contains a detailed monetary block and captures inflation dynamics, which is a key
          concern for supply chain reorientation.
        • Overall, our paper contains a careful analysis of the key aspects of the localisation debate,
          including effects of localisation on domestic competition and efficiency.
        • Section 2 provides a brief overview of the model, the modifications to examine
          global supply chain reorientation, some key details on the calibration and a brief discussion of
          the nature of our exercise.
        • (2020) for discussions of the relative strengths and weaknesses of
          trade and macroeconomic models in assessing large economic shocks.
        • 2.1

          Supply chain reorientation

          Our analysis focuses on imported inputs used to produce goods for export, as the introduction
          of localisation policies is in response to recent disruptions to global supply chains.

        • Since reshoring
          effectively shortens the supply chain, the sum of markups along the chain falls.
        • Further to
          these effects, engagement with global firms provides an opportunity for knowledge spillovers to
          local firms (Criscuolo et al., 2017).
        • This finding calls for limiting the scope of reshoring, such as by focusing on vital goods that are
          most susceptible to supply chain disruptions.
        • (B12)

          Adjusting the share of local inputs in export goods, of course, affects prices and quantities all
          along the supply chain.