Globalization Institute Working Papers
The Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas established the Globalization Institute in 2007 for the purpose of better understanding how the process of deepening economic integration between the countries of the world, or globalization, alters the environment in which U.S. monetary policy decisions are made. 
- 2000s
- Is Openness Inflationary? : Imperfect Competition and Monetary Market Power, No. 1
- A Monetary Model of the Exchange Rate with Informational Frictions, No. 2
- International Trade in Durable Goods : Understanding Volatility, Cyclicality, and Elastics, No. 3
- Cross-border Returns Differentials, No. 4
- Production Sharing and Real Business Cycles in a Small Open Economy, No. 5
- Driving Forces of the Canadian Economy : An Accounting Exercise, No. 6
- Accounting for Persistence and Volatility of Good-level Real Exchange Rates : The Role of Sticky Information, No. 7
- How Should Central Banks Define Price Stability?, No. 8
- Country Portfolios in Open Economy Macro Models, No. 9
- Vehicle Currency, No. 10
- Globalization and Monetary Policy : An Introduction, No. 11
- Financial Globalization, Governance, and the Evolution of the Home Bias, No. 12
- Globalization, Domestic Inflation and the Global Output Gaps : Evidence from the Euro Era, No. 13
- The Effect of Trade with Low-income Countries on U.S. Industry, No. 14
- Variety, Globalization, and Social Efficiency, No. 15
- Technical Note on "The Real Exchange Rate in Sticky Price Models: Does Investment Matter?", No. 16
- The Real Exchange Rate in Sticky Price Models : Does Investment Matter?, No. 17
- Some Preliminary Evidence on the Globalization-inflation Nexus, No. 18
- Default and the Maturity Structure in Sovereign Bonds, No. 19
- An International Perspective on Oil Price Shocks and U.S. Economic Activity, No. 20
- Vertical Specialization and International Business Cycle Synchronization, No. 21
- The Taylor Rule and Forecast Intervals for Exchange Rates, No. 22
- Exchange Rate Pass-through in a Competitive Model of Pricing-to-market, No. 23
- How Successful Is the G7 in Managing Exchange Rates?, No. 24
- Do China and Oil Exporters Influence Major Currency Configurations?, No. 25
- Monthly Pass-through Ratios, No. 26
- International Portfolios, Capital Accumulation and Foreign Assets Dynamics, No. 27
- Investment and Trade Patterns in a Sticky-price, Open-economy Model, No. 28
- Monetary Policy Strategy in a Global Environment, No. 29
- Insulation Impossible : Fiscal Spillovers in a Monetary Union, No. 30
- Fiscal Stabilization with Partial Exchange Rate Pass-through, No. 31
- Has Globalization Transformed U.S. Macroeconomic Dynamics?, No. 32
- Global Slack and Domestic Inflation Rates : A Structural Investigation for G-7 Countries, No. 33
- Should Monetary Policy "Lean or Clean"?, No. 34
- European Hoarding : Currency Use among Immigrants in Switzerland, No. 35
- Long-Horizon Forecasts of Asset Prices when the Discount Factor is close to Unity, No. 36
- Global, Local, and Contagious Investor Sentiment, No. 37
- A Model of International Cities : Implications for Real Exchange Rates, No. 38
- State-dependent Pricing, Local-currency Pricing, and Exchange Rate Pass-through, No. 39
- Business Cycles and Remittances : Can the Beveridge-nelson Decomposition Provide New Evidence?, No. 40
- 2010s
- 2020s
In order to aid in the retrieval of information from this publication, significant tables, charts, and/or articles have been extracted and can be viewed individually or across a span of issues.
2007-2024
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. Globalization and Monetary Policy Institute "Globalization Institute Working Papers" 2007-2024.