Alan Finkelstein Shapiro
Tufts University
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Featured researches published by Alan Finkelstein Shapiro.
Archive | 2015
Alan Finkelstein Shapiro; Andres Gonzalez Gomez
This paper builds a small open economy business cycle model with labor and financial market frictions that incorporates frictional, endogenous self-employment entry and a link between formal credit markets, informal credit, and the labor market. The paper then shows that the model is consistent with the cyclical behavior of both labor and credit markets in Latin American economies and analyzes the aggregate consequences of cyclical macroprudential policy for labor market and aggregate dynamics. It is found that a policy that reduces credit fluctuations successfully reduces consumption, investment, and output volatility, but generates substantially higher unemployment fluctuations in response to productivity shocks. Moreover, the policy increases the volatility of all these variables in response to net worth shocks. The link between formal credit markets, input credit between firms, and self-employment plays a key role in explaining the adverse impact of macroprudential policy on unemployment dynamics. The findings point to potential gains from policy complementarities between macroprudential regulation and active labor market interventions over the business cycle.
Macroprudential Policy and Labor Market Dynamics in Emerging Economies | 2015
Alan Finkelstein Shapiro; Andres Gonzalez
Emerging economies have high shares of self-employed individuals running owner-only firms who, in contrast to many salaried firms, have little access to formal financing and therefore rely on informal financing (input credit) from other firms. We build a small open economy real business cycle model with labor and financial market frictions where formal credit markets, informal credit, and the structure of the labor market interact. The model successfully replicates the cyclical behavior of sectoral employment, formal credit, and the main macroeconomic aggregates in emerging economies. We show that a countercyclical macroprudential policy that reduces formal credit fluctuations has positive though quantitatively limited effects on consumption and output volatility, but generates larger unemployment fluctuations in response to productivity shocks; the same policy increases labor market and aggregate volatility in response to net worth shocks. The link between input credit and the labor market structure---key for capturing the cyclical dynamics of labor and credit markets in the data---plays a crucial role for these results.
Journal of International Economics | 2016
Alan Finkelstein Shapiro; Federico S. Mandelman
Journal of Development Economics | 2017
Brendan Epstein; Alan Finkelstein Shapiro
Archive | 2018
Brendan Epstein; Alan Finkelstein Shapiro; Andres Gonzalez Gomez
Review of Economic Dynamics | 2017
Brendan Epstein; Alan Finkelstein Shapiro; Andres Gonzalez Gomez
Journal of Development Economics | 2018
Alan Finkelstein Shapiro
Journal of International Money and Finance | 2017
Alan Finkelstein Shapiro; Andres Gonzalez Gomez
Archive | 2018
Brendan Epstein; Alan Finkelstein Shapiro; Andres Gonzalez Gomez
Archive | 2017
Brendan Epstein; Alan Finkelstein Shapiro