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Featured researches published by Dirk Muir.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2012

Oil and the world economy: some possible futures.

Michael Kumhof; Dirk Muir

This paper, using a six-region dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model of the world economy, assesses the output and current account implications of permanent oil supply shocks hitting the world economy. For modest-sized shocks and conventional production technologies, the effects are modest. But for larger shocks, for elasticities of substitution that decline as oil usage is reduced to a minimum, and for production functions in which oil acts as a critical enabler of technologies, output growth could drop significantly. Also, oil prices could become so high that smooth adjustment, as assumed in the model, may become very difficult.


Archive | 2013

Getting to Know GIMF : The Simulation Properties of the Global Integrated Monetary and Fiscal Model

Derek Anderson; Benjamin L Hunt; Mika Kortelainen; Michael Kumhof; Douglas Laxton; Dirk Muir; Susanna Mursula; Stephen Snudden

The Global Integrated Monetary and Fiscal model (GIMF) is a multi-region, forward-looking, DSGE model developed by the Economic Modeling Division of the IMF for policy analysis and international economic research. Using a 5-region version of the GIMF, this paper illustrates the model’s macroeconomic properties by presenting its responses under a wide range of experiments, including fiscal, monetary, financial, demand, supply, and international shocks.


The Flexible System of Global Models - FSGM | 2015

The Flexible System of Global Models – FSGM

Michal Andrle; Patrick Blagrave; Pedro Espaillat; Keiko Honjo; Benjamin L Hunt; Mika Kortelainen; René Lalonde; Douglas Laxton; Eleonara Mavroeidi; Dirk Muir; Susanna Mursula; Stephen Snudden

The Flexible System of Global Models (FSGM) is a group of models developed by the Economic Modeling Division of the IMF for policy analysis. A typical module of FSGM is a multi-region, forward-looking semi-structural global model consisting of 24 regions. Using the three core modules focused on the G-20, the euro area, and emerging market economies, this paper outlines the theory under-pinning the model, and illustrates its macroeconomic properties by presenting its responses under a wide range of experiments, including monetary, financial, demand, supply, fiscal and international shocks.


Archive | 2015

Spillovers from China onto Sub-Saharan Africa; Insights from the Flexible System of Global Models (FSGM)

Derek Anderson; Jorge I Canales Kriljenko; Paulo Drummond; Pedro Espaillat; Dirk Muir

What is the impact of economic spillovers from China on sub-Saharan Africa (SSA)? This is an increasingly important question because of Chinas growing economic role as a partner of SSA countries for both trade and the buildup of infrastructure in the region. The impact of spillovers from China has been an open question because of the challenge to use an internally consistent framework with solid economic foundations that accounts for both the direct impact China may have on individual countries in SSA through a variety of channels (trade, investment, financial) as well as the impact on the region through the global economy (economic activity and commodity prices). This paper explores those channels of transmission and provides illustrative order of magnitude for the short- and medium-term economic impact by using AFRMOD, a module of the Flexible System of Global Models (FSGM), a multicountry general equilibrium model developed at the IMF. Three alternative scenarios are considered: first, lower potential output in China that is originally misperceived as a temporary cyclical slowdown; second, structural reforms in China that aim to increase potential output; and third, a relocation of low-end manufacturing to sub-Saharan Africa.


The Benefits of International Policy Coordination Revisited | 2013

The Benefits of International Policy Coordination Revisited

Jaromir Benes; Michael Kumhof; Douglas Laxton; Dirk Muir; Susanna Mursula

This paper uses two of the IMF’s DSGE models to simulate the benefits of international fiscal and macroprudential policy coordination. The key argument is that these two policies are similar in that, unlike monetary policy, they have long-run effects on the level of GDP that need to be traded off with short-run effects on the volatility of GDP. Furthermore, the short-run effects are potentially much larger than those of conventional monetary policy, especially in the presence of nonlinearities such as the zero interest rate floor, minimum capital adequacy regulations, and lending risk that depends in a convex fashion on loan-to-value ratios. As a consequence we find that coordinated fiscal and/or macroprudential policy measures can have much larger stimulus and spillover effects than what has traditionally been found in the literature on conventional monetary policy.


Archive | 2014

Das Public Kapital; How Much Would Higher German Public Investment Help Germany and the Euro Area?

Selim Elekdag; Dirk Muir

Given the backdrop of pressing infrastructure needs, this paper argues that higher German public investment would not only stimulate domestic demand in the near term and reduce the current account surplus, but would also raise output over the longer-run as well as generate beneficial regional spillovers. While time-to-build delays can weaken the impact of the stimulus in the short-run, the expansionary effects of higher public investment are substantially strengthened with an accommodative monetary policy stance—as is typical during periods of economic slack. The current low-interest rate environment presents a window of opportunity to finance higher public investment at historically favorable rates.


The Potential Macroeconomic Impact of the Unconventional Oil and Gas Boom in the United States | 2015

The Potential Macroeconomic Impact of the Unconventional Oil and Gas Boom in the United States

Benjamin L Hunt; Dirk Muir; Martin Sommer

This paper uses two of the IMFs structural macroeconomic models to estimate the potential global impact of the boom in unconventional oil and natural gas in the United States. The results suggest that the impact on the level of U.S. real GDP over roughly the next decade could be significant, but modest, ranging between 1 and 1½ percent. Further, while the impact on the U.S. energy trade balance will be large, most results suggest that its impact on the overall U.S. current account will be negligible. The impact outside of the United States will be modestly positive on average, but most countries dependent on energy exports will be affected adversely.


Banks in The Global Integrated Monetary and Fiscal Model | 2015

Banks in The Global Integrated Monetary and Fiscal Model

Michal Andrle; Michael Kumhof; Douglas Laxton; Dirk Muir

The Global Integrated Monetary and Fiscal model (GIMF) is a multi-region DSGE model developed by the Economic Modeling Division of the IMF for policy and scenario analysis. This paper compares two versions of GIMF, GIMF with a conventional financial accelerator, where bank balance sheets do not play a prominent role, and GIMF with both a financial accelerator and a fully specified banking sector that can make lending losses, and that is regulated according to Basel-III. We illustrate the comparative macroeconomic properties of both models by presenting their responses to a wide range of fiscal, demand, supply and financial shocks.


Journal of Monetary Economics | 2010

Global effects of fiscal stimulus during the crisis

Charles Freedman; Michael Kumhof; Douglas Laxton; Dirk Muir; Susanna Mursula


Archive | 2007

Bank of Canada's participation in the 2007 FSAP macro stress-testing exercise

Don Coletti; René Lalonde; Miroslav Misina; Dirk Muir; Pierre St-Amant; David Tessier

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Michael Kumhof

International Monetary Fund

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Susanna Mursula

International Monetary Fund

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Selim Elekdag

International Monetary Fund

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Stephen Snudden

International Monetary Fund

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Benjamin L Hunt

International Monetary Fund

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Derek Anderson

International Monetary Fund

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Pedro Espaillat

International Monetary Fund

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