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Featured researches published by Ravi Balakrishnan.


Emerging Markets Finance and Trade | 2011

The Transmission of Financial Stress from Advanced to Emerging Economies

Ravi Balakrishnan; Stephan Danninger; Selim Elekdag; Irina Tytell

This paper studies how financial stress, defined as periods of impaired financial intermediation, is transmitted from advanced to emerging economies using a new financial stress index for emerging economies. Previous financial crises in advanced economies passed through strongly and rapidly to emerging economies. The unprecedented spike in financial stress in advanced economies elevated stress across emerging economies above levels seen during the Asian crisis but with significant cross-country variation. The extent of pass-through of financial stress is related to the depth of financial linkages between advanced and emerging economies. Higher current account and fiscal balances do little to insulate emerging economies from the transmission of acute financial stress in advanced economies, although they may still help dampen the impact on the real economy.


What's the Damage? Medium-term Output Dynamics After Banking Crises | 2009

What’s the Damage? Medium-Term Output Dynamics after Banking Crises

Abdul d Abiad; Petya Koeva Brooks; Irina Tytell; Daniel Leigh; Ravi Balakrishnan

This paper investigates the medium-term behavior of output following banking crises, and its association with pre- and post-crisis conditions and policies. We find that output tends to be depressed substantially following banking crises, with no rebound to the precrisis trend. However, growth does eventually tend to return to its precrisis rate, with substantial crosscountry variation in outcomes. The depressed path of output typically results from reductions of roughly equal proportions in the employment rate, the capital-to-labor ratio, and total factor productivity. Initial conditions that are strongly associated with medium-run output losses include the short-run change in output, the occurrence of a joint banking-and-currency crisis, and a high precrisis level of investment. Short-run fiscal and monetary stimulus is associated with smaller medium-run deviations of output and growth from the precrisis trend.


Journal of International Commerce, Economics and Policy | 2012

Surging Capital Flows to Emerging Asia : Facts, Impacts, and Responses

Ravi Balakrishnan; Sylwia Barbara Nowak; Sanjaya Panth; Yiqun Wu

Net capital flows to Emerging Asia rebounded at a record pace following the global financial crisis, raising concerns about overheating and financial stability. This paper documents the size and composition of the most recent surge to Asian emerging markets from a historical perspective and compares developments in the broader economy, asset prices, and corporate variables across the different episodes of strong inflows. We find little evidence of a significant build-up of imbalances and resource misallocation during the most recent surge. We also review country experiences in managing the risks associated with inflows and argue that Asian countries have used regulatory measures during past surges.


Archive | 2013

The Elusive Quest for Inclusive Growth: Growth, Poverty, and Inequality in Asia

Ravi Balakrishnan; Chad Steinberg; Murtaza Syed

This paper assesses how pro-poor and inclusive Asia’s recent growth has been, and what factors have been driving these outcomes. It finds that while poverty has fallen across the region over the last two decades, inequality has increased, dampening the impact of growth on poverty reduction. As a result, relative to other emerging and developing regions and to Asia’s own past, the recent period of growth has been both less inclusive and less pro-poor. Our analysis suggests a number of policies that could help redress these trends and broaden the benefits of growth in Asia. These include fiscal policies to increase spending on health, education, and social safetynets; labor market reforms to boost the labor share of total income; and reforms to make financial systems more inclusive.


Canadian Firm and Job Dynamics | 2008

Canadian Firm and Job Dynamics

Ravi Balakrishnan

To understand better Canadas smooth reallocation of labor in response to the recent commodity price boom, but seemingly poor productivity performance, this paper examines job and firm dynamics in Canada relative to the United States. Overall, it finds that while Canadas labor market efficiency seems comparable to that of the United States, product market rigidities appear to be reducing Canadas capacity for creative destruction, hence undermining productivity growth.


Archive | 2007

Globalization, Gluts, Innovation or Irrationality: What Explains the Easy Financing of the U.S. Current Account Deficit?

Ravi Balakrishnan; Volodymyr Tulin; Tamim Bayoumi

This paper examines the roles of U.S. financial innovation, financial globalization, and the savings glut hypothesis in explaining the rise in U.S. external debt, first in a portfolio balance model, and then empirically. Perhaps surprisingly, financial deepening and falling home bias in industrialized countries explain a large share of external financing. The savings glut hypothesis (including difficult-to-track petrodollar recycling) and U.S. financial innovation are also important, in part as a cause of declining home bias in industrialized countries. The latter underscores the importance of not looking at these factors in isolation, but rather as a constellation of forces that can be self-reinforcing.


U.S. Dollar Risk Premiums and Capital Flows | 2006

U.S. Dollar Risk Premiums and Capital Flows

Ravi Balakrishnan; Volodymyr Tulin

This paper sheds light on the attractiveness of U.S. assets by studying dollar risk premiums, calculated using Consensus exchange rate forecasts, and linking them to bilateral capital flows. The paper finds that the presence of negative dollar risk premiums (i.e. expectations of a dollar depreciation net of interest rate effects) amid record capital inflows could suggest that investors may favor U.S. assets for structural reasons. One possible explanation could be that the Asian crisis created a large pool of savings searching for relatively riskless investment opportunities, which were provided by deep, liquid, and innovative U.S. financial markets with robust investor protection. Moreover, the continued attractiveness of U.S. financial markets to European investors suggests that they offer a large array of assets, with different risk/return characteristics, that facilitate the structuring of diversified investment portfolios. Looking forward, this suggests that the allocative efficiency of U.S. financial markets could mitigate risks of a disorderly unwinding of global current account imbalances.


Archive | 2006

U.S. Inflation Dynamics : What Drives Them Over Different Frequencies?

Ravi Balakrishnan; Sam Ouliaris

This paper aims to improve the understanding of U.S. inflation dynamics by separating out structural from cyclical effects using frequency domain techniques. Most empirical studies of inflation dynamics do not distinguish between secular and cyclical movements, and we show that such a distinction is critical. In particular, we study traditional Phillips curve (TPC) and new Keynesian Phillips curve (NKPC) models of inflation, and conclude that the long-run secular decline in inflation cannot be explained in terms of changes in external trade and global factor markets. These variables tend to impact inflation primarily over the business cycle. We infer that the secular decline in inflation may well reflect improved monetary policy credibility and, thus, maintaining low inflation in the long run is closely linked to anchored inflation expectations.


Archive | 2016

U.S. Dollar Dynamics; How Important Are Policy Divergence and FX Risk Premiums?

Ravi Balakrishnan; Stefan Laseen; Andreas Pescatori

We investigate the drivers of dynamics of major U.S. FX bilaterals. We first construct a novel measure of FX risk premiums using Consensus exchange rate forecasts. We then use VAR analysis to show that (i) risk premium shocks play a key role in driving dynamics of the major U.S. FX bilaterals; (ii) longer-term interest differentials also matter, especially for the Canadian


Archive | 2015

Recent U.S. Labor Force Dynamics; Reversible or not?

Ravi Balakrishnan; Mai Dao; Juan A. Solé; Jeremy Zook

and the Euro; (iii) oil price shocks play a particularly important role for the Canadian

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Volodymyr Tulin

International Monetary Fund

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Chad Steinberg

International Monetary Fund

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Jeremy Zook

International Monetary Fund

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Juan A. Solé

International Monetary Fund

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Sanjaya Panth

International Monetary Fund

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Tamim Bayoumi

International Monetary Fund

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Baoping Shang

International Monetary Fund

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Irina Tytell

International Monetary Fund

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Mai Dao

International Monetary Fund

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