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CPBS Events
Past Events
Research Conferences
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Asia and the Global Financial Crisis
Organized by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
Santa Barbara, California October 19-20, 2009
Agenda and papers
- Conference: "Japan's Bubble, Deflation and Long-Term Stagnation"
Sponsored jointly with ESRI, Japanese Cabinet Office; University of Chicago; Columbia University
December 11-12, 2008
Agenda
- Annual Pacific Basin Conference
September 19-20, 2008
Program and papers
- Conference: "Global Liquidity and East Asia Economies"
Organized jointly with HKIMR and the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, Hong Kong, China
June 26-27, 2008
Agenda
- Senior Policymaker Seminar: "Managing Capital Flows"
Organized jointly with the World Bank, Bank of England, Bank of France
April 29-May 2, 2008
- Annual Pacific Basin Conference
June 8-9, 2007
Agenda
- Annual Pacific Basin Conference
June 16-17, 2006
Agenda
Summary
- Annual Conference: "External Imbalances and Adjustment in the Pacific Basin"
September 22-23, 2005
Agenda
Summary
- Symposium: "Revived Bretton Woods System: A New Paradigm for Asian Development?"
Sponsored jointly with the Clausen Center for International Business & Policy, U.C. Berkeley
February 4, 2005
Agenda
Summary
- Conference: "Emerging Markets and Macroeconomic Volatility: Lessons from a Decade of Financial Debacles"
Sponsored jointly with the Center for International Economics, University of Maryland
June 4-5, 2004
Agenda
Summary
- Senior Policymaker Seminar: "Capital Flows, Monetary Policy and Current Issues in International Finance"
Organized Jointly with the World Bank
February 23-26, 2004
Agenda
- Conference: "Financial Issues in the Pacific Basin Region"
Sponsored jointly with the Journal of the Japanese and International Economies
September 26-27, 2002
Agenda
Summary
- Past conferences »
Research Seminars
- Evaluating Exchange Rate Targeting in a Monetary Policy Rule
Helen Popper Santa Clara University
- Border Prices and Retail Prices
John Rogers Federal Reserve Board
- Estimating the Border Effect: Some New Evidence
Gita Gopinath Harvard University
- Optimal Monetary Policy Response to Oil Shocks
Jean-Marc Natal Swiss National Bank
- Searching for Irving Fisher
Kris Mitchener Santa Clara University
- How do different exporters react to exchange rate changes?
Philippe Martin Sciences Po and CEPR April 7, 2009
- Financial Structure and the Impact of Monetary Policy on Asset Prices
Stefan Gerlach Institute for Monetary and Financial Stability April 3, 2009
- The Olympic Effect
Andrew Rose U.C. Berkeley March 24, 2009
- Foreign Ownership and Firm Performance
Kathryn Dominguez University of Michigan March 4, 2009
- The Skill Composition of Immigrants and the Generosity of the Welfare State
Assaf Razin Cornell University February 9, 2009
- How Strong is the Biological Motivation for Savings?
Shang-Jin Wei Columbia University January 9, 2009
- International Portfolios, Capital Accumulation and Foreign Assets Dynamics
Robert Kollmann ECARES, Brussels January 7, 2009
- Let's Take the Con out of Factor Content
Eric Fisher Cal Poly December 17, 2008
- "International Trade Integration: A Disaggregated Approach"
Dennis Novy Warwick/UC Davis October 30, 2008
- "Intertemporal Distortions in the Second Best"
Roc Armenter FRB New York October 7, 2008
- "Elasticity Optimism"
Jean Imbs HEC Lausanne September 29, 2008
- "Real versus Financial Barriers to Multinational Activity"
Claudia Buch University of Tübingen September 15, 2008
- More »
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Recent Research
Cross-Country Causes and Consequences of the 2008 Crisis: International Linkages and American Exposure
FRBSF Working Paper 09-18 :: Rose and Spiegel
This paper models the causes of the 2008 financial crisis together with its manifestations, using a multiple-indicator multiple-cause (MIMIC) model. Despite the fact that we use a wide number of possible causes in a flexible statistical framework, we are unable to find strong evidence that international linkages can be clearly associated with the incidence of the crisis. In particular, countries heavily exposed to either American assets or trade seem to behave little differently than other countries; if anything, countries seem to have benefited slightly from American exposure.
More »
View other CPBS Working Papers »
Pacific Basin Notes
A series of the FRBSF Economic Letter
More »
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CPBS Staff
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