Climate Risks in Financial Assets
Emanuele Campiglio,
Pierre Monnin and
Adrian von Jagow | 4 November 2019
Monetary,
Discussion Notes | Tags:
Asset Prices,
Climate Risk,
Climate Stress Tests
This note reviews the empirical evidence available in the academic literature about the impact of climate-related risks on financial assets. It addresses three main questions: does climate change already affect financial asset returns? What is the potential impact of future climate-related costs on financial asset
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Unconventional Monetary Policy and Inequality – Is Japan Unique?
Ayako Saiki and
Jon Frost | 20 September 2019
Monetary,
Working Papers | Tags:
Inequality,
Japan,
Quantitative Easing
For over a decade, but especially since the start of Abenomics in 2013, the Bank of Japan (BoJ) has been increasing the monetary base rapidly by implementing an unconventional monetary policy (UMP). In a 2014 study, we found that Japan’s UMP had increased income inequality.
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Distributional Impact of Unconventional Monetary Policies
Pierre Monnin | 25 June 2019
Monetary,
Discussion Notes | Tags:
Income Inequality,
QE
The sustained application of accommodative monetary policies has led to concerns that they were aggravating inequality. The criticism has come from several quarters, from academics to private sector participants, from politicians to media and civil society organizations. Some argued that by boosting housing and stock
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What the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act Means for Tax Expenditures
Eric Toder | 20 June 2019
Fiscal,
Blog | Tags:
Income Tax,
Inequality,
Tax Expenditures
In a new paper, my former Tax Policy Center colleague Daniel Berger and I calculate that the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) modestly reduced the cost of tax expenditures in the individual income tax and made them slightly less regressive. We estimate that
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The Low-Skill Losers
Karen Petrou | 30 April 2019
Monetary,
Blog | Tags:
Employment,
Federal Reserve,
Inequality,
QE
The Fed is devoting increasing analytical – if not yet policy-maker – attention to the unequalizing impact of unconventional policy. It’s a start – a major problem besetting central banks in countries without a robust middle class – i.e., the U.S. – is that
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