Macro Finance
In the department Macro Finance, research focuses on the interaction between the overall economy and the financial system. Shocks in the real economy (e.g., energy costs) affect the market prices of goods and services which then has an impact on the financial system, e.g., through firms' demand for investment or households' saving behavior. This in turn has consequences for the real economy. Thus, there are interactions and a possible amplification of the original shocks. In extreme cases, financial crises occur, leading to large economic costs. The same applies to shocks in the financial economy, e.g., due to changes in monetary policy: Changes in nominal interest rates lead to new (real) decisions in investment and consumption. These interactions are steered by regulatory policies, such as pension policy, energy transition or public debt policy. Particular attention is paid to the influence of the financial architecture and its actors (banks, stock exchanges, central banks, sovereigns) on economic activity and distribution. A precise understanding of these interrelationships requires both a macroeconomic and a microeconomic perspective, the empirical investigation of existing phenomena as well as theoretical analysis with simulations and forecasts. The department management is currently in occupation, so that a precise formulation of the main topics in this comprehensive subject can only be made later.
Publications
| Author/s | Title | Area | Type | Published |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ignazio Angeloni, Johannes Kasinger, Chantawit Tantasith |
The Geography of Banks in the United States (1990-2020) SAFE Working Paper No. 321 |
Financial Intermediation, Macro Finance | SAFE Working Paper | 2021 |
| Andreas Nölke |
In Search of Institutional Complementarities: Comparative Capitalism and Economic Policy Reform Journal of Economic Policy Reform |
Macro Finance | Published Paper | 2021 |
| Dirk Krueger, Alexander Ludwig, Sergio Villalvazo |
Optimal Taxes on Capital in the OLG Model with Uninsurable Idiosyncratic Income Risk Journal of Public Economics |
Macro Finance | Published Paper | 2021 |
| Sandra Eckert |
The European Green Deal and the EU’s Regulatory Power in Times of Crisis The JCMS Annual Review of the European Union in 2020 |
Macro Finance | Published Paper | 2021 |
| Vincent R. Lindner |
Conflict or Cooperation? Explaining the European Commission’s and Social Partners’ Preferences for Low-Level Social Dialogue The Role of Social Partners in Managing Europe’s Great Recession Crisis Corporatism or Corporatism in Crisis? (Routledge Taylor & Francis Group) |
Macro Finance | Published Paper | 2021 |
| Nils Grevenbrock, Max Groneck, Alexander Ludwig, Alexander Zimper |
Cognition, Optimism and the Formation of Age-Dependent Survival Beliefs International Economic Review |
Macro Finance | Published Paper | 2021 |
| Matthias Goldmann |
Contesting Austerity in the 1970s and 1980s - When Human Rights Went Missing Contingency in International Law: On the Possibility of Different Legal Histories |
Financial Intermediation, Macro Finance | Published Paper | 2021 |
| Andreas Nölke |
For a Plurality of Economic and Social Models! Against a Monolithic Euro State! Key Controversies in European Integration (Bloomsbury Publishing) |
Macro Finance | Published Paper | 2021 |
| Aljoscha Janssen, Johannes Kasinger |
Obfuscation and Rational Inattention in Digitalized Markets SAFE Working Paper No. 306 |
Financial Intermediation, Financial Markets, Macro Finance | SAFE Working Paper | 2021 |
| Andreas Nölke |
The Deformation of the Core by Dependency Relations: The Case of Germany in Europe Dependent Capitalisms in Contemporary Latin America and Europe. International Political Economy Series (Springer) |
Macro Finance | Published Paper | 2021 |
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