Macroeconomics

Jumpmind President and CEO Joe Corbin to Lead Panel on Agility at Scale and Digitalizing the In-Store Experience at The Retail Summit 2024 in Dubai

Retrieved on: 
onsdag, april 10, 2024

Jumpmind, Inc., a leading provider of innovative retail technology solutions, today announced the company’s involvement in The Retail Summit 2024 taking place April 23-24 at the Atlantis, The Palm in Dubai.

Key Points: 
  • Jumpmind, Inc., a leading provider of innovative retail technology solutions, today announced the company’s involvement in The Retail Summit 2024 taking place April 23-24 at the Atlantis, The Palm in Dubai.
  • Digital disruption and a change in consumer expectations are driving a profound transformation in retail.
  • Jumpmind CEO and President Joe Corbin will moderate a panel discussion on “Agility at Scale – Pivoting Digitalization In-Store and Enhancing Brand Experiences” on April 23 from 3:40 to 4:20 p.m. local time.
  • I’m excited to lead this panel of retail executives that promises to both delight and inform the Retail Summit audience on the crucial topic of in-store digital transformation.”

Dominant currency pricing in international trade of services

Retrieved on: 
torsdag, april 25, 2024

Abstract

Key Points: 
    • Abstract
      We analyze, for the first time, how firms choose the currency in which they price transactions
      in international trade of services and investigate, using direct evidence, whether the US dollar
      (USD) plays a dominant role in services trade.
    • JEL: F14, F31, F41
      Keywords: dominant currency paradigm, international trade, services.
    • Related research has
      shown that the US dollar (USD) exchange rate is a major source of swings in
      global trade in goods?a ?dominant currency pricing? (DCP) phenomenon?since
      most goods traded internationally are invoiced and sticky in USD.
    • Yet it is also key to look at dominant currency pricing in international trade
      in services for several reasons.
    • First, global trade in services is big?accounting for
      about a quarter of global gross trade flows and for around 40% in terms of valueadded trade.
    • Third, and relatedly, the
      future of globalisation might be in trade in intermediate services?as progress with
      digitech lowers technological barriers to such trade across borders.
    • But perhaps the main reason is that trade in services is conceptually different
      from trade in goods.
    • Our paper is the first, to our best knowledge, that analyzes how firms choose
      the currency in which they price transactions in international trade of services and
      that examines whether dominant currency pricing differs between trade in goods
      and services using direct evidence? hitherto unavailable?on patterns of currency
      choices in international transactions in services compared to goods.
    • Work on dominant currency pricing has
      almost exclusively focused on trade in goods.
    • One reason is that data on patterns
      in invoicing currency for trade in services are ?virtually nonexistent? (Adler et al.
    • Yet it is important to look at dominant currency pricing in international trade
      in services for several reasons.
    • Using the exporter?s (or producer) currency in exports is known in the literature as producer
      currency pricing (PCP), while using the importer?s currency is known as local currency pricing (LCP)
      and using a third currency is known as vehicle currency pricing (VCP).
    • Our paper is the first, to our best knowledge, that analyzes how firms choose the
      currency in which they price transactions in international trade of services and that
      examines whether dominant currency pricing differs between international trade in
      goods and services using direct evidence ? hitherto unavailable ? on patterns of
      currency choices in international transactions in services compared to goods.
    • First,
      we rule out compositional effects, that is that differences in the use of currencies
      reflect differences in trade partners in services vs. goods trade.
    • Both in extra-EU and intra-EU trade, the EUR is the
      most widely used currency, be it on the export or import side.
    • Based
      on the framework, we stress which factors should determine currency choices in
      international trade, and to what extent one should expect differences between
      services trade and goods trade.
    • Second, it can price in the importer?s currency
      (local currency pricing, LCP).4 Third, it can use a third currency, say currency
      v (vehicle currency pricing, VCP).
    • That is,
      the currency choice problem is equivalent to determining the currency in which the
      desired price is least volatile.
    • (2022)
      provide systematic empirical evidence ? firm size and exposure to foreign currencies
      in imported inputs ? should also shape currency choices in services trade.
    • Dominant currency pricing in USD ? services vs. goods trade
      Having established that currency choice in international trade of services is an
      active firm-level decision as well as the determinants of this decision, we now

      8.

    • Services and goods exports: prevalence of different pricing strategies (percent)
      Notes: The table shows the shares (in value terms) of different pricing strategies: producer currency
      pricing (PCP), local currency pricing (LCP) and vehicle currency pricing (VCP).
    • To make comparisons with goods trade, we rely on Eurostat?s
      macro data on international trade in goods by invoivcing currency.
    • If intra-EU trade is more important in services than
      in goods trade, this could hence be an explanation for the lower prevalence of the
      USD in services trade.
    • We showed
      that while the USD is also extensively used as a vehicle currency in services trade, its
      prevalence is systematically lower than in goods trade.
    • Hence for all travel services exports
      the invoicing currency is the EUR; for travel imports it is the currency of the
      destination of travel (i.e.
    • Also for these

      ECB Working Paper Series No 2932

      33

      services it seems plausible that trade does not take place vis-?-vis all counterparts
      in each currency.

    • Figure B.2: Share of international trade in services in global GDP broken down by type (%)
      Notes: Authors? calculations using World Bank and World Trade Organization data.
    • An earlier version of this paper circulated under the title ?Currency choices and the role of the
      U.S. dollar in international services trade?.

Nowcasting consumer price inflation using high-frequency scanner data: evidence from Germany

Retrieved on: 
tisdag, april 23, 2024
Consensus, Online, Cream, Honey, Tax, Glass, MAPI, Consensus Economics, Journal of Economic Perspectives, Milk, Shower, Low-alcohol beer, Autoregressive–moving-average model, Infant, C3, Islam, Wine, Core inflation, Research Papers in Economics, National accounts, Kálmán, Barcode, Journal of International Economics, Communication, Royal Statistical Society, COVID19, Kohl (cosmetics), Natural disaster, Business, Observation, Paper, VAT, European Economic Review, Diebold Nixdorf, Blancmange, Calendar, Sunflower oil, Annual Review of Economics, Hand, C4, DESTATIS, NBER, Tinning, Razor, Forecasting, Gasoline, Coffee, European Economic Association, Cat, Journal of Monetary Economics, Journal of Applied Econometrics, Medeiros, Architecture, Oxford University Press, Producer, GfK, Quarterly Journal of Economics, Margarine, NCBS, Starch, Political economy, Consistency, COVID-19, Consensus decision-making, Website, MIDAS, Behavior, Deutsche Bundesbank, PPI, World Bank, Collection, Medical classification, Orange, Eurozone, Butter, FMCG, Noise, Travel, Clothing, History, Inflation, Liver, International economics, Journal of Political Economy, BSI, OLS, Statistics, Consumer, PDF, University of Chicago, Classification, ECB, Fats, Policy, Multi, WOB, Outline, C6, Mincing, Canadian International Council, Social science, Perfume, University of California, Berkeley, Journal of Forecasting, Federal Reserve Bank, JEL, L1, Journal, Research, Candle, Food, TPD, Credit, Spice, LPG, Janssen, Marmalade, Superior, Literature, Chocolate, Beef, Kiel University, European Central Bank, Natural gas, HICP, Monetary economics, Yogurt, Section 5, ILO, Bermingham, Price, GTIN, Cheese, Macroeconomics, Growth, Beck, XJ, Government, De Beer, Supermarket, Ice cream, Naturally, C53, Corn flakes, BIS, Biscuit, LASSO, Petroleum, A.2, Poultry, Accuracy and precision, Application, White, Lettuce, Risk, ESCB, University of Siegen, OECD, Chapter One, Lipstick, Sack, XT, BIC, Garlic, Consumption, Sokol, Meat, VAR, Database, Section 3, Rusk, American Economic Journal, Royal, Curd, Overalls, Lamb, Great Lockdown, Fruit, Economy, COICOP, International Journal of Forecasting, Aftershave, Section 2, Nonparametric statistics, Attention, Conference, CPI, Heat, Public economics, Common sunflower, Nowcasting, American Economic Review, Computational Statistics (journal), GFK, COVID-19 pandemic, Exercise, Shock, Running, UNECE, Edible, Gambling, Banco, Rigid transformation, European Commission, Frozen, C.2, PRISMA, Official statistics, Concept, Drink, Transaction data, Somatosensory system, Punctuality, Altbier, Food prices, Response, GDP, Index, E31, Cabinet of Germany, Holiday, Machine learning, Series, Green, Whisky, Vegetable, Cola, Journal of Econometrics, Sadik Harchaoui, University, Aggregate, World Bank Group, B.1, Use, Book, Economic statistics, Civil service commission, 1L, Apple, Bread, Filter, Central bank, Brandeis University, Economic Modelling, Bank, Barkan, Roulade, Dairy product, Neural network, Reproduction, IMF, Section, ID, Data, D4L, Cryptocurrency

Key Points: 

    Pan Finance Announces the Q1 Award Winners of 2024

    Retrieved on: 
    onsdag, mars 27, 2024

    In this first edition of 2024, Pan Finance Magazine's cover story highlights how AI is shaking up the way we invest our money.

    Key Points: 
    • In this first edition of 2024, Pan Finance Magazine's cover story highlights how AI is shaking up the way we invest our money.
    • "Receiving the Pan Finance award as the most reliable property management firm in Mexico is a profound honour.
    • "FlexFunds is honoured to receive the Pan Finance 2023 Best Asset Securitization Program award.
    • By naming Neosun Energy as the winner of the "Most Innovative Solar Module Product - China & MENA 2024", the Pan Finance award has recognised Neosun's new approach that is changing the way to making solar energy affordable.

    Pan Finance Announces the Q1 Award Winners of 2024

    Retrieved on: 
    onsdag, mars 27, 2024

    In this first edition of 2024, Pan Finance Magazine's cover story highlights how AI is shaking up the way we invest our money.

    Key Points: 
    • In this first edition of 2024, Pan Finance Magazine's cover story highlights how AI is shaking up the way we invest our money.
    • "Receiving the Pan Finance award as the most reliable property management firm in Mexico is a profound honour.
    • "FlexFunds is honoured to receive the Pan Finance 2023 Best Asset Securitization Program award.
    • By naming Neosun Energy as the winner of the "Most Innovative Solar Module Product - China & MENA 2024", the Pan Finance award has recognised Neosun's new approach that is changing the way to making solar energy affordable.

    US monetary policy is more powerful in low economic growth regimes

    Retrieved on: 
    tisdag, april 2, 2024
    Tao, Research Papers in Economics, Excess, American Economic Journal, Doan, Policy, RT, Interpolation, Economic growth, Absorption, Business, E32, Low, Browning, European Economic Review, UST, NBER, Forecasting, Macroeconomics, European Economic Association, Journal of Monetary Economics, Journal of Applied Econometrics, TVAR, Oxford University Press, Time series, Economic Inquiry, Paper, Linearity, Joshua Angrist, Nobuhiro, Environment, Political economy, Journal of Financial Economics, Rated R, R2, Website, Emi, Energy economics, Probability, Medical classification, Eurozone, Sigismund, Quarterly Journal of Economics, Zero lower bound, History, Nature, Chapter, ZT, Journal of Political Economy, Bocconi University, OLS, Statistics, University of California, Irvine, PDF, Classification, ECB, XS, ITP, Impact, Estimation, DGP, Mark Thoma, Social science, Elsevier, JEL, Cambridge University Press, Real, M1, Research, Textbook, Private sector, FED, Credit, UTT, Literature, Federal Reserve, Knotek, Evelyn Regner, Table, European Central Bank, Chow, FRED, Monetary economics, Wald, Ben Bernanke, Premium, P500, BIS, EWMA, International Economic Review, Federal funds rate, Money, Treasury, C32, The Economic Journal, Federal Reserve Economic Data, Employment, Risk, FFR, Suggestion, FOMC, Monte Carlo method, Sigmoid, VAR, Database, Projection, Ascari, The Journal of Finance, Yield curve, United States Treasury security, Economy, Fed, Figure, NFCI, Financial economics, EXP, Freedom, Central bank, PCE, Monetary policy, American Economic Review, Exercise, Interest, Samuel, URR, Rigidity, Business cycle, XT, Landing slot, Chap, Daron Acemoglu, Markov, Blue chip, Kuttner, Response, Quarterly Journal, YT, Channel, GDP, Standard, Effect, Federal, Cost, Christian Social Union (UK), Journal of Econometrics, Comm, Mark Gertler, Use, Economic statistics, IW, Bank for International Settlements, Finance Secretary (India), UC, Bank, Reproduction, Section, News, Housing, Data, Food industry

    Key Points: 

      Isabel Schnabel: From laggard to leader? Closing the euro area’s technology gap

      Retrieved on: 
      lördag, februari 17, 2024
      Eurofi, Lecture, NGEU, Research, European Economic Association, GameChanger, Artificial intelligence, European Investment Bank, Education, Investment, Mining, Invention, Quarterly Journal of Economics, Growth, Superstar, Commerce, MIT Press, Labour economics, GDP, Health, Christian Social Union (UK), Climate change, History, Information technology, CompStat, Applied economics, ICC, Policy, Apple, Public policy, Diagnosis, Federal Reserve, European Parliament, Literature, NBER, Ageing, International economics, Software, Metal, Productivity, New Vision (newspaper), Review of World Economics, Recovery, Next Generation, Computer, MIT, Journal of Labor Economics, Nicolaus Copernicus, Journal of Monetary Economics, Craft, EDIS, European Fiscal Board, Howitt, International Chamber of Commerce, Financial management, Council, Journal, Electricity, Congress, Nobel, American Economic Journal, Transatlantic, Communication, Environment, Journal of Economic Perspectives, European Commission, American Economic Review, European Economic Review, Capital market, Economic impact analysis, Indicator, Demography, World War II, Paul Krugman, Single market, RRF, Macroeconomics, IMF, Daniel Schwaab, Frankfurt, Conference, Aggression, Carbon, Civil service commission, European Central Bank, Rise, Business, Labor share, Skill, Democracy, Heart, Quarterly Journal, E.F, Speech, Public, Public sector, OECD, Reproduction, Internet, Monetary economics, Fabiani, AI, Labour, Intangibles, Paper, Government, Competition, Economic and monetary union, Journal of International Economics, Organization, Treaty, Diffusion, Observation, Autumn, COVID-19, Resilience, Amazon, Role, Hand, Lost, EMU, Unemployment, ECB

      This paper, by means of a DSGE model including heterogeneous firms and banks, financial frictions and prudential regulation, first shows the need of climate-related capital requirements in the existing prudential framework.

      Key Points: 
      • This paper, by means of a DSGE model including heterogeneous firms and banks, financial frictions and prudential regulation, first shows the need of climate-related capital requirements in the existing prudential framework.
      • We further show that relying on microprudential regulation alone would not be enough to account for the systemic dimension of transition risk.

      Gas price shocks and euro area inflation

      Retrieved on: 
      tisdag, februari 13, 2024
      Transfer, Person, Marques, OPEC, Interval (mathematics), Policy, NBER, Research Papers in Economics, The Economic Journal, Danmarks Nationalbank, Socialism, Energy transition, VIX, Canadian International Council, Paper, E30, Great, Macroeconomics, VAR, Central bank, Balke, Quarterly Journal, Q43, Census, Elasticity, USD, Projection, PMI, Social science, Hou, Bank of France, Topa, Fertilizer, Electricity, SSRN, University, A.5, Section 2, Natural gas, COVID-19, Swings, Overalls, Rotation, Journal of Monetary Economics, Harmonization, Title Transfer Facility, Pain, Ferrari, Uncertainty, Statistics, Medical classification, C50, Harper (publisher), Democracy, Shock, IMF, TTF, Fed, PPI, Power, European Central Bank, Monetary economics, Temperature, Section 3, E31, Nature, Food, Local, Joseph Schumpeter, Website, Energy economics, Speech, DeSantis, GDP, Rigidity, BVAR, Confidence interval, Money, Refinitiv, Bank, Baumeister, Pressure, Oil, Deutsche Bundesbank, International Energy Agency, Employment, Section 4, GIZ, C54, Sun, ECB, European Economic Association, Weather, A.9, Quarterly Journal of Economics, Exercise, HICP, Technical report, Attention, Literature, Journal of Applied Econometrics, Reproduction, International economics, Political economy, Absorption, Joseph Stiglitz, Unemployment, Journal, American Economic Review, Index, Section 5, Business, IP, Bachmann, Research, Federal Reserve Bank, Government, PDF, IWH, Complexity, Failure, Energy Information Administration, Explosive

      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?.