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Featured researches published by Ralph Setzer.


Archive | 2007

Money and Housing: Evidence for the Euro Area and the US

Claus Greiber; Ralph Setzer

This paper examines the relation between money and housing variables in the euro area and in the US. Our empirical model is based on a standard money demand relation which is augmented by housing market variables. In doing so, co-integrated money demand relationships can be established for both the euro area and the US. Furthermore, we find evidence for asset inflation channels, that is, liquidity fuels housing market developments.


Intereconomics | 2004

Contagion, herding and exchange-rate instability — A survey

Ansgar Belke; Ralph Setzer

Despite the considerable body of literature on the subject of currency crises there is still very little agreement on the true drivers of these, crises and their transmission across countries. This article focuses in particular on the role of herd behaviour and financial contagion, and the high exchange-rate. volatility which is a direct consequence of these. It also looks at the adverse macroeconomic consequences of episodes with high exchange-rate volatility, especially in terms of labour market performance.


Economic Modelling | 2016

Regional Bank Efficiency and Its Effect on Regional Growth in 'Normal' and 'Bad' Times

Ansgar Belke; Ulrich Haskamp; Ralph Setzer

The financial crisis affected regions in Europe in a different magnitude. This is why we examine whether regions which incorporate banks with a higher intermediation quality grow faster in “normal” times and are more resilient in “bad” ones. For this purpose, we measure the intermediation quality of a bank by estimating its profit and cost efficiency while taking the changing banking environment after the financial crisis into account. Next, we aggregate the efficiencies of all banks within a NUTS 2 region to obtain a regional proxy for financial quality in twelve European countries. Our results show that relatively more profit efficient banks foster growth in their region. The link between financial quality and growth is valid in “normal” and in “bad” times. These results provide evidence to the importance of swiftly restoring bank pro_tability in euro area crisis countries through addressing high nonperforming loans ratios and decisive actions on bank recapitalization.


Ruhr Economic Papers | 2014

Exports and Capacity Constraints: A Smooth Transition Regression Model for Six Euro-Area Countries

Ansgar Belke; Anne Oeking; Ralph Setzer

The significant gains in export market shares made in a number of vulnerable euro-area crisis countries have not been accompanied by an appropriate improvement in price competitiveness. This paper argues that, under certain conditions, firms consider export activity as a substitute for serving domestic demand. The strength of the link between domestic demand and exports is dependent on capacity constraints. Our econometric model for six euro-area countries suggests domestic demand pressure and capacity-constraint restrictions as additional variables of a properly specified export equation. As an innovation to the literature, we assess the empirical significance through the logistic and the exponential variant of the non-linear smooth transition regression model. We find that domestic demand developments are relevant for the short-run dynamics of exports in particular during more extreme stages of the business cycle. A strong substitutive relationship between domestic and foreign sales can most clearly be found for Spain, Portugal and Italy, providing evidence of the importance of sunk costs and hysteresis in international trade.


Archive | 2004

The Real Impacts of Excessive Exchange Rate Volatility in Emerging Markets

Ansgar Belke; Ralph Setzer

Though it is widely believed that exchange rate variability reduces welfare, it is difficult to prove this in a formal setting. This paper presents a simple model of job creation and exchange rate uncertainty to illustrate a negative relationship between exchange rate variability and employment. It is argued that volatility matters because employment and investment decisions have some degree of irreversibility. In a second step, various studies on exchange rate variability in the CEECs and the Mercosur region are summarized. The empirical results suggest that exchange rate variability has tangible economic costs.


European Economy - Economic Papers 2008 - 2015 | 2009

Determinants of intra-euro area government bond spreads during the financial crisis

Salvador Barrios; Per Iversen; Magdalena Lewandowska; Ralph Setzer


Diskussionspapiere aus dem Institut für Volkswirtschaftslehre der Universität Hohenheim | 2005

The Different Extent of Privatisation Proceeds in EU Countries: A Preliminary Explanation Using a Public Choice Approach

Ansgar Belke; Frank Baumgärtner; Friedrich Schneider; Ralph Setzer


Journal of Banking and Finance | 2010

Liquidity and the Dynamic Pattern of Asset Price Adjustment: A Global View

Ansgar Belke; Walter Orth; Ralph Setzer


Archive | 2003

Exchange Rate Volatility and Employment Growth: Empirical Evidence from the CEE Economies

Ansgar Belke; Ralph Setzer


International Economics and Economic Policy | 2008

Sowing the seeds for the subprime crisis: does global liquidity matter for housing and other asset prices?

Ansgar Belke; Walter Orth; Ralph Setzer

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Ansgar Belke

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Ulrich Haskamp

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Anne Oeking

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Friedrich Schneider

Johannes Kepler University of Linz

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