Label
Benhabib, Jess, 1948-
Actions
Incoming Resources
- Public capital and optimal taxes without commitment
- Monetary policy and multiple equilibria
- Cross-country growth regressiona
- Persistence of business cycles in multisector RBC models
- Uniqueness and indeterminacy, transitional dynamics in a model of endogenous growth
- On the economics of fiscal populism in an open economy
- A new class of solutions to dyanmic programming problems arising in growth theory and applications to dynamic games
- The monetary transmission mechanism
- The role of human capital and political instability in economic development
- Backward-looking interest-rate rules, interest rate smoothing and macroeconomic instability
- A note on the political economy of immigration
- The aggregate effects of monetary externalities
- On growth and indeterminacy, some theory and evidence
- Homework in macroeconomics I, basic theory
- Homework in macroeconomics II, aggregate fluctuations
- Endogenous fertility and growth
- Growth accounting with physical and human capital accumulation
- The aggregate effects of monetary externalities
- Indeterminacy and sector-specific externalities
- Indeterminacy and cycles in two-sector discrete-time models
- Backward-looking interest-rate rules, interest-rate smoothing and macroeconomic instability
- Indeterminacy and sector-specific externalities
- Externalities and growth accounting
- The monetary transmission mechanism
- Joint exploitation of a productive asset, a game-theoretic approach
- Social conflict, growth and income distribution
- Avoiding liquidity traps
- Indeterminacy and increasing returns
- Follow the leader, on growth and diffusion
- On the economics of fiscal populism in an open economy
- Social conflict, growth and inequality
- The perils of Taylor rules
- Optimal taxes without commitment
- The perils of Taylor rules
- The role of human capital in economic development, evidence from aggregate cross-country and regional US data
- Indeterminacy and increasing returns
- The monetary transmission mechanism
- On competitive cycles in productive economies
- Monetary policy and multiple equilibria