SI 2022 Monetary Economics

Emi Nakamura and Jón Steinsson, Organizers

July 11-15, 2022

Charles Room AB

Format: Authors present for 45 minutes with questions throughout

Conference Code of Conduct

Monday, July 11
12:00 pm
Lunch
1:00 pm
Juan Antolin-Diaz, London Business School
Paolo Surico, London Business School

The Long-Run Effects of Government Spending
1:45 pm
George J. Hall, Brandeis University
Jonathan Payne, Princeton University
Thomas J. Sargent, New York University and NBER
Balint Szoke, Federal Reserve Board

Costs of Financing US Federal Debt: 1791-1933
2:30 pm
Break
2:45 pm
Alexander Dietrich, University of Tuebingen
Edward S. Knotek II, Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Kristian O. Myrseth, University of York
Robert W. Rich, Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Raphael Schoenle, Brandeis University
Michael Weber, University of Chicago and NBER

Greater Than the Sum of the Parts: Aggregate vs. Aggregated Inflation Expectations
3:30 pm
Francesco Bianchi, Johns Hopkins University and NBER
Leonardo Melosi, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Anna Rogantini Picco, European Central Bank

Who Is Afraid of Eurobonds?
4:15 pm
Adjourn
Tuesday, July 12
12:00 pm
Lunch
1:00 pm
Eric R. Sims, University of Notre Dame and NBER
Jing Cynthia Wu, University of Notre Dame and NBER
Ji Zhang, Tsinghua University

Unconventional Monetary Policy According to HANK
1:45 pm
Eduardo Dávila, Yale University and NBER
Andreas J. Schaab, Princeton University

Optimal Monetary Policy with Heterogeneous Agents: A Timeless Ramsey Approach
2:30 pm
Break
2:45 pm
Antonio Falato, Federal Reserve Board
Jasmine Xiao, University of Notre Dame

Expectations and Credit Slumps
3:30 pm
Niels Joachim Gormsen, University of Chicago and NBER
Kilian Huber, University of Chicago and NBER

Corporate Discount Rates
4:15 pm
Adjourn
Wednesday, July 13
8:00 am
Coffee and Pastries
Morning joint with Macro, Money and Financial Frictions and with International Finance and Macroeconomics - Program
Thursday, July 14
12:00 pm
Lunch
1:00 pm
Alan Moreira, University of Rochester and NBER
Valentin Haddad, University of California, Los Angeles and NBER
Tyler Muir, University of California, Los Angeles and NBER

Whatever It Takes? The Impact of Conditional Policy Promises
1:45 pm
David Lucca, Jane Street
Jonathan H. Wright, Johns Hopkins University and NBER

The Narrow Channel of Quantitative Easing: Evidence from YCC Down Under
2:30 pm
Break
2:45 pm
Louphou Coulibaly, University of Wisconsin-Madison and NBER
Javier Bianchi, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis

​Liquidity Traps, Prudential Policies, and International Spillovers
3:30 pm
Hassan Afrouzi, Columbia University and NBER
Choongryul Yang, Federal Reserve Board

Selection in Information Acquisition and Monetary Non-Neutrality
4:15 pm
Adjourn
Friday, July 15
12:00 pm
Lunch
1:00 pm
Mary Amiti, Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Sebastian Heise, Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Fatih Karahan, Amazon
Ayşegül Şahin, University of Texas at Austin and NBER

Inflation Strikes Back: The Return of Wage to Price Pass-Through
1:45 pm
Masao Fukui, Boston University
Masayuki Yagasaki, University of Tokyo

The Impact of Central Bank Stock Purchases: Evidence from Discontinuities in Policy Rules
2:30 pm
Break
2:45 pm
Dmitry Arkhangelsky, CEMFI
Vasily Korovkin, Universitat Pompeu Fabra

On Policy Evaluation with Aggregate Time-Series Shocks
3:30 pm
Munseob Lee, University of California, San Diego
Claudia Macaluso, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
Felipe Schwartzman, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond

Minority Unemployment, Inflation, and Monetary Policy (slides)
4:15 pm
Adjourn