Working Papers (Federal Reserve Bank of Boston)
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Research Department Working Papers disseminate Research staff members' empirical and theoretical research with the aim of advancing knowledge of economic matters. The papers present research-in-progress and often include conclusions that are preliminary. They are published to stimulate discussion and invite critical comments. Current working papers can be found at bostonfed.org.
- Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Research Department Working Papers
- 1990s
- Why State Medicaid Costs Vary: A First Look, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 91-1
- What is the Impact of Pensions on Saving?, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 91-2
- The Capitalization and Portfolio Risk of Insurance Companies, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 91-3
- The Capital Crunch - Neither a Borrower Nor a Lender Be, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 91-4
- What is the Impact of Pensions on Saving?, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 91-5
- Treasury Bill Rates in the 1970s and 1980s, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 91-6
- The Measurement and Determinants of Single-Family House Prices, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 91-7
- Economic Rents, the Demand for Capital, and Financial Structure, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 91-8
- Back to the Future: Monetary Policy and the Twin Deficits, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 92-1
- The Real Exchange Rate and Foreign Direct Investment in the United States: Relative Wealth vs. Relative Wage Effects, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 92-2
- Tobin's q, Economic Rents, and the Optimal Stock of Capital, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 92-3
- The Role of Real Estate in the New England Credit Crunch, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 92-4
- Failed Bank Resolution and the Collateral Crunch: The Advantages of Adopting Transferable Puts, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 92-5
- Defaults of Original Issue High-Yield Convertible Bonds, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 92-6
- Mortgage Lending in Boston: Interpreting HMDA Data, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 92-7
- Assessing the Performance of Real Estate Auctions, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 93-1
- Bank Regulation and the Credit Crunch, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 93-2
- A Model of Real Estate Auctions versus Negotiated Sales, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 93-3
- Empirical Evidence on Vertical Foreclosure, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 93-4
- Reverse Mortgages and the Liquidity of Housing Wealth, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 93-5
- Equity and Time to Sale in the Real Estate Market, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 93-6
- Monetary Policy When Interest Rates Are Bounded at Zero, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 94-1
- Optimal Monetary Policy in a Model of Overlapping Price Contracts, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 94-2
- Near Common Factors and Confidence Regions for Present Value Models, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 94-3
- Estimating Revenues from Tax Reform in Transition Economies, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 94-4
- Gifts, Down Payments, and Housing Affordability, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 94-5
- Near Observational Equivalence and Persistence in GNP, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 94-6
- Banks and the Availability of Small Business Loans, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 95-1
- Bank Regulatory Agreements and Real Estate Lending, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 95-2
- Housing Price Dynamics within a Metropolitan Area, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 95-3
- Tobin's q, Economic Rents, and the Optimal Stock of Capital, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 95-4
- Small Business Credit Availability: How Important is Size of Lender?, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 95-5
- The (Un)Importance of Forward-Looking Behavior in Price Specifications, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 95-6
- Modeling Long-Term Nominal Interest Rates, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 95-7
- Debt Capacity, Tax Exemption, and the Municipal Cost of Capital: A Reassessment of the New View, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 95-8
- Estimating Demand Elasticities in a Differentiated Product Industry: The Personal Computer Market, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 95-9
- Discrimination, Redlining, and Private Mortgage Insurance, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 95-10
- Intergenerational Transfers, Borrowing Constraints, and Saving Behavior: Evidence from the Housing Market, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 95-11
- A New Approach to Causality and Economic Growth, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 95-12
- The International Transmission of Financial Shocks: The Case of Japan, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 96-1
- Computationally Efficient Solution and Maximum Likelihood Estimation of Nonlinear Rational Expectations Models, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 96-2
- The Maturity Structure of Term Premia with Time-Varying Expected Returns, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 96-4
- Will Legislated Early Intervention Prevent the Next Banking Crisis?, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 96-5
- Redlining in Boston: Do Mortgage Lenders Discriminate Against Neighborhoods?, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 96-6
- Price Discrimination in the Airline Market: The Effect of Market Concentration, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 96-7
- Towards a Compact, Empirically Verified Rational Expectations Model for Monetary Policy Analysis, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 96-8
- Tax-Exempt Bonds Really Do Subsidize Municipal Capital, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 96-9
- Can Studies of Application Denials and Mortgage Defaults Uncover Taste-Based Discrimination?, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 96-10
- Reserve Banks, the Discount Rate Recommendation, and FOMC Policy, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 96-11
- Unifying Empirical and Theoretical Models of Housing Supply, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 96-12
- Bank Consolidation and Small Business Lending: It's Not Just Bank Size That Matters, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 97-1
- Is Bank Supervision Central to Central Banking?, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 97-3
- Manager's Opportunistic Trading of Their Firm's Shares: A Case Study of Executives in the Banking Industry, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 97-4
- Collateral Damage: Effects of the Japanese Bank Crisis on Real Activity in the United States, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 97-5
- The Effect of Pricing on Demand and Revenue in Federal Reserve ACH Payment Processing, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 97-6
- Input and Output Inventories, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 97-7
- The Subsidy from State and Local Tax Deductibility: Trends, Methodological Issues, and Its Value After Federal Tax Reform, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 97-8
- An Optimizing Model for Monetary Policy Analysis: Can Habit Formation Help?, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 98-1
- Does the Federal Reserve Have an Informational Advantage? You Can Bank on It, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 98-2
- The Poor Performance of Foreign Bank Subsidiaries: Were the Problems Acquired or Created?, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 98-3
- What Do Cross-Sectional Growth Regressions Tell Us about Convergence?, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 98-4
- Dynamic Inconsistencies: Counterfactual Implications of a Class of Rational Expectations Models, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 98-5
- Weekends Can Be Rough: Revisiting the Weekend Effect in Stock Prices, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 98-6
- Japanese Banking Problems: Implications for Southeast Asia, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 98-7
- Will Greater Disclosure and Transparency Prevent the Next Banking Crisis?, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 98-8
- Determinants of the Japanese Premium: Actions Speak Louder than Words, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 98-9
- The Impact of Greater Bank Disclosure Amidst a Banking Crisis, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 99-1
- Productivity Shocks, Investment, and the Real Interest Rate, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 99-2
- Fiscal Retrenchments and the Level of Economic Activity, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 99-3
- Are "Deep" Parameters Stable? The Lucas Critique as an Empirical Hypothesis, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 99-4
- Network Externalities and Technology Adoption: Lessons from Electronic Payments, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 99-5
- Capital Account Liberalization, Financial Depth, and Economic Growth, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 99-6
- Is Bank Supervision Central to Central Banking?, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 99-7
- Does the Federal Reserve Possess an Exploitable Informational Advantage?, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 99-8
- Is the US Economy Characterized by Endogenous Growth? A Time-Series Test of Two Stochastic Growth Models, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 99-9
- Gross Job Flows and Firms, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 99-10
- Job Creation, Job Destruction, and the Real Exchange Rate, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Paper 99-11
- 2000s
- 2010s
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.
1991-2015
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston and Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. Research Department. Working Papers (Federal Reserve Bank of Boston). 1991-2015. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/title/9829, accessed on April 13, 2026.