D Fitzgerald… - Journal of International Economics, 2004 - Elsevier
We estimate the effect of factor proportions on the pattern of manufacturing specialization in
a cross-section of OECD countries, taking into account that factor accumulation responds to
productivity. We show that the failure to control for productivity differences produces ...
J Durkan, D FitzGerald… - Understanding …, 1999 - en.scientificcommons.org
D Fitzgerald - Photocopy. Harvard University (January), 2003 - doireann.com
Abstract This paper revisits both the theory and the empirics of the classic Balassa#
Samuelson productivity model of cross# country differences in price levels. The classic
model says that price levels are positively related to productivity in the traded sector and ...
D Fitzgerald… - V manuscript, 2008 - nber.org
Abstract We investigate the role played by pricing* to* market and endogenous price adjust*
ment in explaining exchange rate passthrough. We make use of a producer price data set
where we observe the prices charged by plants who produce and sell the same product in ...
D Fitzgerald - UC Santa Cruz International Economics Working …, 2004 - papers.ssrn.com
Abstract: The empirical" gravity" equation is extremely successful in explaining bilateral
trade. This paper shows how a multi-country model of specialization and costly trade (ie a
microfounded gravity model) can be applied to explain empirical exchange rate puzzles. ...
D Fitzgerald - Working Papers, 2007 - netec.mcc.ac.uk
Abstract This paper addresses the question of whether both goods and asset market frictions
are necessary to explain the failure of consumption risk sharing across countries. I develop a
test that uses bilateral import data to identify separately the role of trade costs and asset ...
D Fitzgerald… - Manuscript, Stanford University, 2010 - Citeseer
Abstract We document pricing-to-market by producers who sell the same product to buyers
in two markets that are segmented by variable exchange rates. We can cleanly identify
desired relative markup responses to exchange rate movements because we observe ...
D Fitzgerald - Journal of Monetary Economics, 2008 - Elsevier
If countries specialize in imperfectly substitutable goods, trade costs increase the share of
expenditure devoted to domestic output, reducing the exposure of consumer price inflation
to exchange rate changes. I present a multi-country flexible-price model where ...
[CITATION] Pricing-to-market: Evidence from producer prices
D Fitzgerald… - 2010 - mimeo
[CITATION] Terms of Trade Effects
F Doireann - Interdependence and Cross-Country Differences in …, 2003
[CITATION] Forthcoming.“A Gravity View of Exchange Rate Disconnect.”
D Fitzgerald - Journal of Monetary Economics
[CITATION] mTrade Costs
D Fitzgerald - Asset Market Frictions and Risk $ Sharing: A Joint Test, …, 2006
D Fitzgerald - 2003 - emlab.berkeley.edu
Abstract I use a multi# country general equilibrium trade model to illustrate how asymmetric
relations between countries induce dependence of bilateral exchange rates on third#
country fundamentals. I discuss the implications of asymmetry for standard empirical tests ...
[CITATION] Trade Costs, Asset Market Frictions and Risk Sharing: A Joint Test, manuscript
D Fitzgerald - 2006 - Stanford University
D Fitzgerald - 2004 - escholarship.org
Abstract: The empirical “gravity” equation is extremely successful in explaining bilateral
trade. This paper shows how a multi-country model of specialization and costly trade (ie a
microfounded gravity model) can be applied to explain empirical exchange rate puzzles. ...
[CITATION] How Far Are We From International Consumption Risk Sharing
D Fitzgerald - 2010
D Fitzgerald - 2003 - en.scientificcommons.org
Publikationsansicht. 34071724. Essays at the intersection of international finance and international
trade / (2003). Fitzgerald, Doireann. Abstract. Thesis (Ph. D., Dept. of Economics)--Harvard
University, 2003.. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 88-92). ...
D Fitzgerald - 2000 - doireann.com
Abstract In a currency union, regional adjustment to asymmetric shocks can be decomposed
into four margins. Adjustment can take place through employment, unemployment,
participation and wages. Where regions or countries have different currencies, exchange ...
D Fitzgerald… - 2012 - doireann.com
Abstract Aggregate exports are not very responsive to movements in real exchange rates,
though they respond strongly to trade liberalizations, a fact sometimes referred to as the
International Elasticity Puzzle. We use 10 years of merged plant census and customs ...
D Fitzgerald - 2010 - doireann.com
Abstract I use bilateral import data to test for and quantify the importance of trade costs and
asset market frictions in explaining the failure of perfect international consumption risk
sharing. I find that while frictions in international asset markets significantly impede ...
D Fitzgerald… - 2006 Meeting Papers, 2006 - repec.org
Abstract This paper addresses the question of whether goods or asset market frictions are
necessary to explain the failure of consumption risk sharing across countries. I present a
multi-country DSGE model with Armington specialization. There are iceberg costs of ...
D Fitzgerald… - 2010 - doireann.com
Abstract We use ten years of plant-level data for Ireland to estimate how export entry and exit
depend on nominal exchange rates. To guide our empirical work, we present a dynamic
model of demand accumulation by plants with heterogenous costs which may participate ...
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