Federal Reserve

FEDS Paper: Settlement Speed and Financial Stability(Revised)

Agostino Capponi and Jin-Wook ChangThis paper investigates how settlement speed affects financial stability in payment networks, accounting for netting benefits, liquidity costs, and counterparty risks. Faster settlement reduces crisis likelihood but amplifies crisis severity. The net welfare effect depends on network topology and proximity to default threshold points—settlement times at which the number of defaulting agents changes discontinuously.

FEDS Paper: Household Consumption Does Not Respond Directly to Interest Rates: Evidence From 10 Macroeconomic Shocks(Revised)

Edmund Crawley and William L. GamberWe estimate how much household spending responds directly to changes in interest rates. We develop a Bayesian procedure that uses the empirical impulse responses to macroeconomic shocks to discipline the consumer block of a HANK model. The procedure can be applied shock-by-shock or pooled jointly.

FEDS Paper: Household Consumption Does Not Respond Directly to Interest Rates: Evidence From 10 Macroeconomic Shocks(Revised)

Edmund Crawley and William L. GamberWe estimate how much household spending responds directly to changes in interest rates. We develop a Bayesian procedure that uses the empirical impulse responses to macroeconomic shocks to discipline the consumer block of a HANK model. The procedure can be applied shock-by-shock or pooled jointly.

FEDS Paper: The Role of Inflation Perceptions in Consumer Inflation Expectations: Evidence from the Euro Area

Matthieu Bussière, Johanna Gilbert, and Olesya GrishchenkoUsing data on euro-area household inflation forecasts from the European Commission Consumer Survey, we show that households' perceptions of recent price changes play a key role in the formation of their inflation expectations. Such a relationship remains robust when we account for specific inflation components, household characteristics, and macroeconomic conditions, even though the perceptions-expectations relationship is heterogeneous across countries.

FEDS Paper: Paying More and Buying Less: 2025 Tariffs and U.S. Household Spending

Sinem Hacıoğlu Hoke and Leo FelerThis paper estimates the effects of the 2025 U.S. tariffs on household spending using transaction-level data linked to tariff exposure and a tariff sentiment survey. Comparing high versus low tariff-exposed categories, we find 15 to 20 percent price pass-through. At the mean increase in tariff exposure, prices rise by 1 to 2 percent while spending falls by roughly 4 percent.

FEDS Paper: Financial Liberalizations, Booms, and Crashes

Maximilian Grimm, Moritz Schularick, and Emil VernerFinancial liberalization is often seen as a way to deepen credit markets and stimulate economic growth, but it may also fuel credit booms that end in crisis. We construct a new cross-country database of banking regulation policies covering 21 regulatory indicators for 18 advanced economies since World War II. We distinguish liberalizations that directly relax constraints on credit supply from broader financial reforms.

FEDS Paper: Alternative Scenarios at the Federal Reserve from 1968 to 2020: Data, Interpretation, and Evaluation

Edward Herbst, Scott Konzem, and Cristina ScofieldWe comprehensively document 1,265 Federal Reserve staff alternative scenarios presented to the Federal Open Market Committee in publicly released materials from 1968 to 2020. Scenarios grew in frequency and sophistication, typically spanning a range of outcomes around the baseline.

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