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Economics 642: Winter 2004International Finance: Reading List Economics 642: Winter 2004 Linda Tesar This is a doctoral level course in international finance and macroeconomics. Topics covered in the course include the intertemporal approach to the current account, international business cycles, international risksharing and home bias, purchasing power parity, models of exchange rate determination, balance of payments crises, financial market contagion and alternative exchange rate regimes. Sources: General reference materials for the couse are: Foundations of International Macroeconomics, by Maurice Obstfeld and Kenneth Rogoff, Cambridge, MA, MIT Press, 1996. (Denoted by FIM in the readings below.) The Handbook of International Economics, ed. by Gene Grossman and Kenneth Rogoff, North Holland - Elsevier Press, 1996 (denoted HIE.) Recursive Macroeconomic Theory, by Lars Ljungqvist and Thomas J. Sargent, Cambridge, MA MIT Press, 2000. The Handbook will be placed on reserve in Foster Library. Articles can be downloaded from the journal websites (link from the Economics Department homepage to Foster Library to the journals collection), from JSTORE, Science Direct, ProQuest or from the NBER Working papers site (http://www.nber.org/). If you have trouble locating a particular article, please let me know and I will make copies available. Requirements: 1. Paper (40% of final grade). The purpose of the paper is to replicate the results of an article in international finance that has been published in a top general interest or international economics journal. You may choose an empirical paper and replicate the tables reported in the paper. Alternatively, you may choose an article that uses numerical methods, and you must reproduce the numerical solution or simulations. In either case, the article you wish to replicate and the proposed content of your paper must be cleared with me by the sixth week of the semester. If you decide to replicate a paper using a numerical method and the code that replicates the results of a particular journal article are readily available (e.g. from the authors), obviously you WILL NOT receive credit for replicating those results. You may, however, use that code to extend/modify the article’s findings in a significant way. The paper is due during finals week and must be in a format suitable for submission to a journal. 2. Final exam (40%) 3. Problem sets (20%). I will hand out problem sets periodically throughout the semester. Some may require computational work, so familiarity with GAUSS and/or MATLAB will be helpful. 1Course Outline and Readings: 1. REAL MODELS OF INTERTEMPORAL TRADE AND CURRENT ACCOUNT DYNAMICS 1.A. Small open economy FIM, chapters 1 – 3. Ljungqvist and Sargent, Recursive Macroeconomic Theory, ch. 1-3. Obstfeld and Rogoff, “The intertemporal approach to the current account,” HIE ch. 1, sections 1 – 3.1. Obstfeld, M., “Capital Mobility in the World Economy: Theory and Measurement,” Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy 24, 1986, pp. 55-104 Feldstein, M. and C. Horioka, “Domestic Saving and International Capital Flows,” Economic Journal 90, 1980. Taylor, A., “International Capital Mobility in History: the Savings-Investment Relationship,” NBER WP 5743. Tesar, L., “Savings, Investment and International Capital Flows,” Journal of International Economics 31, August 1991. Mendoza, E., “Real Business Cycles in a Small Open Economy: The Canadian Case,” AER 1991. Schmitt-Grohe and Uribe, “Closing Small Open Economy Models” JIE 2003. 1.B. Two-Country Models FIM, chapter 3 (in particular sections 3.2-3.5). Backus, D., P. Kehoe and F. Kydland, “International Real Business Cycles,” Journal of Political Economy, 1992. Stockman, A., and L. Tesar, “Tastes and Technology in a Two-Country Model of the Business Cycle: Explaining International Co-Movements,” AER 1995. Backus, D., P. Kehoe and F. Kydland, “Dynamics of the Trade Balance and the Terms of Trade: the J-Curve?,” AER, 1994. Baxter, M. "International Trade and Business Cycles," HIE, chapter 35. Baxter, M. and M. Crucini, “Explaining Savings-Investment Correlations,” AER 1992. Costello, D. “A Cross-Country, Cross-Industry Comparison of the Behavior of Solow Residuals,” JPE 1993. 22. INTERNATIONAL CONSUMPTION CORRELATIONS, GAINS FROM RISKSHARING AND HOME BIAS FIM, Chapter 5. Ljungqvist and Sargent, Recursive Macroeconomic Theory, ch. 7. Lucas, R.E., “Interest Rates and Currency Prices in a Two-Country World,” Journal of Monetary Economics 10, 1982. Lewis, K., “Puzzles in International Financial Markets,” HIE chapter 37, section 2. Lewis, K., "What Can Explain the Apparent Lack of Consumption Risksharing?" JPE April 1996. French, K. and J. Poterba, “Investor Diversification and International Equity Markets,” AER 1991. Tesar, L. and I. Werner, “Home Bias and High Turnover,” Journal of International Money and Finance, 1994. Coval and Moskowitz, “Home Bias at Home: Local equity preference in domestic portfolios,” Journal of Finance, 1999. Lewis, K. "Why do stocks and consumption imply such different gains from international risksharing," Journal of International Economics 52, 2000, pp. 1-35. Davis, Nalewaik and Willen, “On the gains to international trade in risk financial assets,” NBER WP 7795. Chari and Henry, “Risk Sharing and Asset Prices: Evidence from a Natural Experiment” NBER WP 8988, forthcoming Journal of Finance. Kehoe, P. and F. Perri, "International Business Cycles with Endogenous Incomplete Markets," Econometrica, 2000. Heathcote and Perri, “Financial Globalization and Real Regionalization” 3. THE LAW OF ONE PRICE, PPP AND EXCHANGE RATE PASS-THROUGH FIM, Chapter 4 and Chapter 10, pp. 711-712. Engle, C. and J. Rogers, “How Wide is the Border?” AER December 1996. Rogoff, K., “The Purchasing Power Parity Puzzle,” Journal of Economic Literature, June 1996. Engel, C., “Accounting for U.S. real exchange rate changes,” JPE June 2000. Engel, C., “Long-run PPP may not hold after all,” JIE 57 (2000), pp. 243-273. Lewis, K., "Puzzles in International Financial Markets," HIE chapter 37, section 1. Burstein, Eichenbaum and Rebelo, “Why is inflation so low after large devaluations? NBER Working paper 8748. Burstein, Eichenbaum and Rebelo, “Large devaluations and


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