Marcos Poplawski-Ribeiro
International Monetary Fund
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marcos Poplawski-Ribeiro.
Fiscal Multipliers and the State of the Economy | 2012
Anja Baum; Marcos Poplawski-Ribeiro; Anke Weber
Only a few empirical studies have analyzed the relationship between fiscal multipliers and the underlying state of the economy. This paper investigates this link on a country-by-country basis for the G7 economies (excluding Italy). Our results show that fiscal multipliers differ across countries, calling for a tailored use of fiscal policy. Moreover, the position in the business cycle affects the impact of fiscal policy on output: on average, government spending, and revenue multipliers tend to be larger in downturns than in expansions. This asymmetry has implications for the choice between an upfront fiscal adjustment versus a more gradual approach.
Medium-Term Fiscal Multipliers during Protracted Recessions | 2014
Salvatore Dell'Erba; Marcos Poplawski-Ribeiro; Ksenia Koloskova
The paper examines the consequences of fiscal consolidation in times of persistently low growth and high unemployment by estimating medium-term fiscal multipliers during protracted recessions (PR) in a sample of 17 OECD countries. Based on Jorda’s (2005) local projection methodology, we find that cumulative fiscal multipliers related to output, employment and unemployment at five-year horizons are significantly above one during PR episodes. These results suggest that medium-term fiscal consolidation plans to reduce public debt burdens should proceed gradually if economic activity remains below trend for a prolonged period.
Current Account Norms in Natural Resource Rich and Capital Scarce Economies | 2013
Juliana Dutra Araujo; Bin Li; Marcos Poplawski-Ribeiro; Luis-Felipe Zanna
The permanent income hypothesis implies that frictionless open economies with exhaustible natural resources should save abroad most of their resource windfalls and, therefore, feature current account surpluses. Resource-rich developing countries (RRDCs), on the other hand, face substantial development needs and tight external borrowing constraints. By relaxing these constraints and providing a key financing source for public investment in RRDCs, temporary resource revenues might then be associated with current account deficits, or at least low surpluses. This paper develops a neoclassical model with private and public investment and several frictions that capture pervasive features in RRDCs, including absorptive capacity constraints, inefficiencies in investment, and borrowing constraints that can be relaxed when natural resources lower the country risk premium. The model is used to study the role of investment and these frictions in shaping the current account dynamics under windfalls. Since consumption and investment decisions are optimal, the model also serves to provide current account benchmarks (norms). We apply the model to the Economic and Monetary Community of Central Africa and discuss how our results can be used to inform the current account norm analysis pursued at the International Monetary Fund.
Archive | 2011
Mauricio Jose Serpa Barros de Moura; Caio Piza; Marcos Poplawski-Ribeiro
This paper studies the effects of property-titling on labor supply. The role of legal ownership security is isolated by comparing the effect that being part of, or excluded from, a land title program in a unique quasi-experiment in two similar communities in the Brazilian city of Osasco. Our main innovation is the estimation of the distributive impact of land title on hours worked via the quantile regression methodology and the weighting estimator of Firpo (2007). The estimates suggest that the impact of land-titling on labor supply is heterogeneous and greater for those households with fewer hours worked before the program.
Archive | 2017
Daniel Leigh; Weicheng Lian; Marcos Poplawski-Ribeiro; Rachel Szymanski; Viktor Tsyrennikov; Hong Yang
We examine the stability and strength of the relationship between exchange rates and trade over time using three alternative approaches, mitigating the endogeneity of the relation. We find that both exchange rate pass-through and the price elasticity of trade volumes are largely stable over time. Economic slack and financial conditions affect the relationship, but there is limited evidence that participation in global value chains has significantly changed the exchange rate–trade relationship over time.
Journal of Development Economics | 2013
Juliana Dutra Araujo; Bin Grace Li; Marcos Poplawski-Ribeiro; Luis-Felipe Zanna
World Development | 2011
Victor Duarte Lledo; Marcos Poplawski-Ribeiro
Journal of African Economies | 2011
Carlos Caceres; Marcos Poplawski-Ribeiro; Darlena Tartari
Journal of African Economies | 2011
Alfredo Baldini; Marcos Poplawski-Ribeiro
Archive | 2014
Aiko Mineshima; Marcos Poplawski-Ribeiro; Anke Weber