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A list of articles published
by members of the Dallas Fed Research staff.
2011
| 2010
| 2009
| 2008
| 2007
| 2006
| 2005
| 2004
| 2003
| 2002
| 2001
| 2000
2003 Academic Publications
The Use and Abuse of Real-Time Data in Economic Forecasting
Review of Economics and Statistics, August 2003
Sheila Dolmas, Evan F. Koenig and Jeremy Piger
Abstract: We distinguish between three different strategies for estimating forecasting equations with real-time data and argue that the most popular approach should generally be avoided. The point is illustrated with a model that uses current-quarter monthly industrial production, employment, and retail sales data to predict real GDP growth. When the model is estimated using either of our two alternative methods, its out-of-sample forecasting performance is superior to that obtained using conventional estimation and compares favorably with that of the Blue Chip consensus.
Is the Markup a Useful Real-Time Predictor of Inflation?
Economics Letters, August 2003
Evan F. Koenig
Abstract: Unlike their revised counterparts, real-time markup data fail to improve the performance of a simple Phillips-curve inflation forecasting equation and have little predictive power beyond that of survey measures of inflation expectations.
Increasing Market Discipline
on Banks: Subordinated Debt and Bank Loan Sales
Research in Finance,
2003
Andrew H. Chen, Kenneth J. Robinson and Thomas F. Siems
Abstract: While subordinated debt can
be used to increase market discipline on banks by playing
a corporate governance role in the presence of a federal
safety net that encourages risk taking, it also has
implications for banks’ loan sales. Using two
measures of banks’ loan sales activity, we find
greater proportions of subordinated debt increase the
likelihood that banks engage in loan sales activity,
and are associated with greater proportions of loan
sales. Our results have implications about banks’
lending efficiency as well as their transparency and
disclosure policies that could play a role in the transmission
mechanism of monetary policy.
Is the Community Reinvestment
Act in Need of Further Reform? Evidence from Equity
Markets during the 1995 Reform Process
Journal of Financial Services
Research, February 2003
David P. Ely and Kenneth J. Robinson
Abstract: In May 1995 the Federal Banking
Agencies adopted major reforms to the implementation
of the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) to make the
examination process more objective and performance-based,
promote consistency, and reduce regulatory burden. This
study presents tests of excess stock returns around
key events in the reform process and examines whether
the patterns of returns were affected by financial institution
type and size. While we find that portfolios of banks
and thrifts recorded statistically significant excess
returns for certain events, the cumulative response
was mostly statistically insignificant. A policy implication
of our findings is that the potential for further improvement
in the administration of CRA requirements still existed
following the 1995 reform efforts.
Do Amnesty Programs Reduce Undocumented Immigration? Evidence from IRCA
Demography, August 2003
Pia Orrenius and Madeline Zavodny
Abstract: This paper examines whether mass legalization programs reduce future undocumented immigration. We focus on the effects of the 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act, which granted amnesty to nearly 2.7 million undocumented immigrants. We find that apprehensions of persons attempting to illegally cross the U.S.-Mexico border declined immediately following passage of the law but returned to normal levels during the period when undocumented immigrants could file for amnesty and the years thereafter. Our findings suggest that the amnesty program did not change long-run patterns of undocumented immigration from Mexico.
Early Warning Models in Real
Time
Journal of Banking and Finance,
October 2003
Jeffery W. Gunther and Robert R. Moore
Abstract: Using a unique set of banking
data containing both originally reported and subsequently
revised financial variables, we find adverse revisions
to accounting statements are associated with downgrades
in supervisory ratings. To assess the financial significance
of the revisions, we compare the ability of the original
and revised data to map into exam ratings. The relationship
between accounting data and exam results is significantly
stronger for revised data than for real-time data. Our
findings document significant differences between real-time
and revised banking data, highlight the auditing role
of bank exams, and provide a more realistic assessment
of early warning model accuracy.
Loss Underreporting and the
Auditing Role of Bank Exams
Journal of Financial Intermediation,
April 2003
Jeffery W. Gunther and Robert R. Moore
Abstract: Using a unique set of banking
data containing both originally reported and subsequently
revised financial variables, we study accounting restatements.
Our results indicate the worse a bank's financial condition,
the more likely it is for originally reported data to
understate financial losses. Also, we find supervisory
exams have an important role in uncovering financial
problems and prompting accounting restatements to correct
loss underreporting. While revisions are directly related
to financial difficulties, exam-based restatements are
evident at even the earliest states of deterioration,
indicating substantial accounting misstatements—at
both banks and other types of companies—can occur
well outside severe business circumstances.
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