Matteo Cacciatore
HEC Montréal
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Publication
Featured researches published by Matteo Cacciatore.
Journal of International Economics | 2015
Matteo Cacciatore; Fabio Ghironi; Viktors Stebunovs
This paper studies the domestic and international effects of the transition to an interstate banking system implemented by the U.S. since the late 1970s in a dynamic, stochastic, general equilibrium model with endogenous producer entry. Interstate banking reduces the degree of local monopoly power of financial intermediaries. We show that the an economy that implements this form of deregulation experiences increased producer entry, real exchange rate appreciation, and a current account deficit. The rest of the world experiences a long-run increase in GDP and consumption. Less monopoly power in financial intermediation results in less volatile business creation, reduced markup countercyclicality, and weaker substitution effects in labor supply in response to productivity shocks. Bank market integration thus contributes to a moderation of firm-level and aggregate output volatility. In turn, trade and financial ties between the two countries in our model allow also the foreign economy to enjoy lower GDP volatility in most scenarios we consider. The results of the model are consistent with features of the U.S. and international business cycle after the U.S. began its transition to interstate banking.
National Bureau of Economic Research | 2017
Matteo Cacciatore; Romain Duval; Giuseppe Fiori; Fabio Ghironi
This paper studies the impact of product and labor market reforms when the economy faces major slack and a binding constraint on monetary policy easing. such as the zero lower bound. To this end, we build a two-country model with endogenous producer entry, labor market frictions, and nominal rigidities. We find that while the effect of market reforms depends on the cyclical conditions under which they are implemented, the zero lower bound itself does not appear to matter. In fact, when carried out in a recession, the impact of reforms is typically stronger when the zero lower bound is binding. The reason is that reforms are inflationary in our structural model (or they have no noticeable deflationary effects). Thus, contrary to the implications of reduced-form modeling of product and labor market reforms as exogenous reductions in price and wage markups, our analysis shows that there is no simple across-the-board relationship between market reforms and the behavior of real marginal costs. This significantly alters the consequences of the zero (or any effective) lower bound on policy rates.
Archive | 2012
Matteo Cacciatore; Romain Duval; Giuseppe Fiori
Review of Economic Dynamics | 2016
Matteo Cacciatore; Giuseppe Fiori
Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control | 2016
Matteo Cacciatore; Romain Duval; Giuseppe Fiori; Fabio Ghironi
2013 Meeting Papers | 2013
Matteo Cacciatore
Research in Economics | 2015
Matteo Cacciatore; Giuseppe Fiori; Fabio Ghironi
International Journal of Central Banking | 2015
Matteo Cacciatore; Fabio Ghironi; Stephen J. Turnovsky
National Bureau of Economic Research | 2018
Alessandro Barattieri; Matteo Cacciatore; Fabio Ghironi
Archive | 2017
Alessandro Barattieri; Matteo Cacciatore; Francesco Costamagna