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Featured researches published by Pablo D'Erasmo.


Journal of Monetary Economics | 2009

Politico-economic consequences of rising wage inequality

Philip Dean Corbae; Pablo D'Erasmo; Burhanettin Kuruscu

This paper uses a dynamic political economy model to evaluate whether the observed rise in wage inequality and decrease in median to mean wages can explain some portion of the relative increase in transfers to low earnings quintiles and relative increase in effective tax rates for high earnings quintiles in the U.S. over the past several decades. Specifically, we assume that households have uninsurable idiosyncratic labor efficiency shocks and consider policy choices by a median voter which are required to be consistent with a sequential equilibrium. We choose the transition matrix to match observed mobility in wages between 1978 and 1979 in the panel study of income dynamics (PSID) data set and then evaluate the response of social insurance policies to a new transition matrix that matches the observed mobility in wages between 1995 and 1996 and is consistent with the rise in wage inequality and the decrease in median to mean wages between 1979 and 1996. We deal with the problem that policy outcomes affect the evolution of the wealth distribution (and hence prices) by approximating the distribution by a small set of moments. We contrast these numbers with those from a sequential utilitarian mechanism, as well as mechanisms with commitment.


American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics | 2016

Market Exposure and Endogenous Firm Volatility over the Business Cycle

Ryan A. Decker; Pablo D'Erasmo; Hernan J. Moscoso Boedo

We propose a theory of endogenous firm-level risk over the business cycle based on endogenous market exposure. Firms that reach a larger number of markets diversify market-specific demand shocks at a cost. The model is driven only by total factor productivity shocks and captures the observed countercyclity of firm-level risk. Using a panel of US firms we show that, consistent with our theoretical model, measures of market reach are procyclical, and the countercyclicality of firm-level risk is driven by those firms that adjust their market exposure, which are larger than those that do not. (JEL D21, D22, E23, E32, L25)


National Bureau of Economic Research | 2015

What is a Sustainable Public Debt

Pablo D'Erasmo; Enrique G. Mendoza; Jing Zhang

The question of what is a sustainable public debt is paramount in the macroeconomic analysis of fiscal policy. This question is usually posed as asking whether the outstanding public debt and its projected path are consistent with those of the governments revenues and expenditures (i.e. whether fiscal solvency conditions hold). We identify critical flaws in the traditional approach to evaluate debt sustainability, and examine three alternative approaches that provide useful econometric and model-simulation tools to analyze debt sustainability. The first approach is Bohns non-structural empirical framework based on a fiscal reaction function that characterizes the dynamics of sustainable debt and primary balances. The second is a structural approach based on a calibrated dynamic general equilibrium framework with a fully specified fiscal sector, which we use to quantify the positive and normative effects of fiscal policies aimed at restoring fiscal solvency in response to changes in debt. The third approach deviates from the others in assuming that governments cannot commit to repay their domestic debt, and can thus optimally decide to default even if debt is sustainable in terms of fiscal solvency. We use these three approaches to analyze debt sustainability in the United States and Europe after the recent surge in public debt following the 2008 crisis, and find that all three raise serious questions.


Research Department Publications | 2013

Access to Credit and the Size of the Formal Sector in Brazil

Pablo D'Erasmo

This paper studies the link between credit conditions and formalization in Brazil. Over the last decade, Brazil has experienced a large increase in the level of credit and the rate of formalization. these changes are linked to a reduction in the cost of credit and policy reforms oriented toward improving the efficiency of the financial sector. The paper develops a model with endogenous formal and informal sectors to evaluate how much of the change in corporate credit and the size of the formal sector can be attributed to a reduction in financial intermediation costs. The model predicts that the reduction in intermediation costs generates an increase in the credit-to-output ratio and the fraction of formal workers, in line with the data. By affecting the allocation of capital and the entry and exit rates, the change in credit conditions has important implications for the firm size distribution and aggregate productivity.


Social Science Research Network | 2016

Optimal Domestic (And External) Sovereign Default

Pablo D'Erasmo; Enrique G. Mendoza

Infrequent but turbulent episodes of outright sovereign default on domestic creditors are considered a “forgotten history” in Macroeconomics. We propose a heterogeneous-agents model in which optimal debt and default on domestic and foreign creditors are driven by distributional incentives and endogenous default costs due to the value of debt for self-insurance, liquidity and risk-sharing. The governments aim to redistribute resources across agents and through time in response to uninsurable shocks produces a rich dynamic feedback mechanism linking debt issuance, the distribution of government bond holdings, the default decision, and risk premia. Calibrated to Spanish data, the model is consistent with key cyclical co-movements and features of debt-crisis dynamics. Debt exhibits protracted fluctuations. Defaults have a low frequency of 0.93 percent, are preceded by surging debt and spreads, and occur with relatively low external debt. Default risk limits the sustainable debt and yet spreads are zero most of the time.


Journal of Monetary Economics | 2012

Financial Structure, Informality and Development

Pablo D'Erasmo; Hernan J. Moscoso Boedo


2013 Meeting Papers | 2013

Intangibles and Endogenous Firm Volatility over the Business Cycle

Hernan J. Moscoso Boedo; Pablo D'Erasmo


MPRA Paper | 2007

Investment and Firm Dynamics

Pablo D'Erasmo


Journal of the European Economic Association | 2016

DISTRIBUTIONAL INCENTIVES IN AN EQUILIBRIUM MODEL OF DOMESTIC SOVEREIGN DEFAULT: Distributional Incentives in an Equilibrium Model

Pablo D'Erasmo; Enrique G. Mendoza


Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control | 2014

Misallocation, Informality, and Human Capital: Understanding the Role of Institutions

Pablo D'Erasmo; Hernan J. Moscoso Boedo; Asli Senkal

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Enrique G. Mendoza

National Bureau of Economic Research

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P. Dean Corbae

University of Texas at Austin

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Asli Senkal

University of Virginia

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Jing Zhang

University of Michigan

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Philip Dean Corbae

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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