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Domestic Policies and Sovereign Default

By Emilio Espino, Julian Kozlowski, Fernando M. Martin, and Juan M. Sánchez

American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics, July 2025

A model with two essential elements—sovereign default and distortionary fiscal and monetary policies—explains the interaction between sovereign debt, default risk, and inflation in emerging countries. We derive conditions under which monetary policy i...

Estimating Macrofiscal Effects of Climate Shocks from Billions of Geospatial Weather Observations

By Berkay Akyapı, Matthieu Bellon, and Emanuele Massetti

American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics, July 2025

The literature studying the macroeconomics of weather has focused on temperature and precipitation annual averages, while microstudies have focused more on extreme weather measures. We construct hundreds of variables from high-frequency, high-spatial-reso...

Search, Screening, and Sorting

By Xiaoming Cai, Pieter Gautier, and Ronald Wolthoff

American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics, July 2025

We examine how search frictions impact labor market sorting by constructing a model consistent with evidence that employers interview a subset of a pool of applicants. We derive necessary and sufficient conditions for sorting in applications and matches. ...

An American Macroeconomic Picture: Supply and Demand Shocks in the Frequency Domain

By Mario Forni, Luca Gambetti, Antonio Granese, Luca Sala, and Stefano Soccorsi

American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics, July 2025

We provide a few new empirical facts that theoretical models should feature in order to be consistent with the data. (i) There are two classes of shocks: demand and supply. Supply shocks have long-run effects on economic activity; demand shocks do not. (i...

A Stepping Stone Approach to Norm Transitions

By Selim Gulesci, Sam Jindani, Eliana La Ferrara, David Smerdon, Munshi Sulaiman, and Peyton Young

American Economic Review, July 2025

We propose a model to study when an intermediate action can serve as a stepping stone that enables the elimination of a harmful norm. While the intermediate action may facilitate the first "step," it may also become a new norm. We derive intuitive conditi...

The Organization of Innovation: Incomplete Contracts and the Outsourcing Decision

By Thomas Jungbauer, Sean Nicholson, June Pan, Michael Waldman, and Lucy Xiaolu Wang

American Economic Journal: Microeconomics

Why do firms outsource research and development (R&D) for some products while conduct- ing R&D in-house for similar ones? An innovating firm risks cannibalizing its existing products. The more profitable these products, the more the firm wants to limit ...