Carlo A. Favero spends much of his time researching Monetary economics, Monetary policy, Interest rate, Macroeconomics and Fiscal policy. His work on Exchange rate as part of general Monetary economics research is frequently linked to German and Stability, bridging the gap between disciplines. His work deals with themes such as Inflation, Sample, Consolidation and Fiscal adjustment, which intersect with Monetary policy.
His study looks at the relationship between Inflation and topics such as Econometrics, which overlap with Complete information and Lucas critique. His Interest rate course of study focuses on Inflation targeting and Supply shock, Standard deviation, Variance, Output gap and Aggregate supply. The various areas that Carlo A. Favero examines in his Fiscal policy study include Budget constraint, Government revenue and Debt.
Carlo A. Favero focuses on Monetary policy, Monetary economics, Econometrics, Interest rate and Fiscal policy. Monetary policy is a primary field of his research addressed under Macroeconomics. His research in Monetary economics intersects with topics in International economics and Debt.
His studies deal with areas such as Bond, Yield curve and Predictability as well as Econometrics. His Interest rate research includes themes of Exchange rate, Convergence and Sample. His research investigates the connection between Fiscal policy and topics such as Budget constraint that intersect with issues in Intertemporal budget constraint.
His primary scientific interests are in Monetary economics, Austerity, Fiscal adjustment, Econometrics and Recession. His Monetary economics research incorporates themes from Government spending and Replication. In his research on the topic of Government spending, Economic policy and Fiscal policy is strongly related with Aggregate demand.
His Econometrics study frequently draws connections to other fields, such as Bond. His Recession study frequently intersects with other fields, such as Monetary policy. His biological study spans a wide range of topics, including Business cycle and Interest rate.
Monetary economics, Austerity, Recession, Monetary policy and Econometrics are his primary areas of study. His New Keynesian economics study, which is part of a larger body of work in Monetary economics, is frequently linked to Oecd countries, bridging the gap between disciplines. His work carried out in the field of Recession brings together such families of science as Fiscal union and Capital market.
His study in Monetary policy is interdisciplinary in nature, drawing from both Business cycle, Currency, Factor analysis and Interest rate. His Interest rate research integrates issues from Currency union and Central bank. The concepts of his Econometrics study are interwoven with issues in Taylor rule and Constraint.
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Debt and the Effects of Fiscal Policy
Carlo Favero;Francesco Giavazzi.
National Bureau of Economic Research (2007)
Technical efficiency and scale efficiency in the Italian banking sector: A non-parametric approach
Carlo Ambrogio Favero;Luca Papi.
Applied Economics (1995)
Yield spreads on EMU government bonds
Lorenzo Codogno;Carlo Favero;Alessandro Missale.
Economic Policy (2003)
The output effect of fiscal consolidation plans
Alberto Alesina;Carlo Ambrogio Favero;Carlo Ambrogio Favero;Francesco Giavazzi.
Journal of International Economics (2015)
The Transmission Mechanism of Monetary Policy in Europe: Evidence from Banks' Balance Sheets
Carlo A. Favero;Francesco Giavazzi;Luca Flabbi.
National Bureau of Economic Research (1999)
The Immediate Challenges for the European Central Bank
Rüdiger Dornbusch;Carlo Favero;Francesco Giavazzi.
Research Papers in Economics (1998)
Measuring monetary policy with VAR models: An evaluation
F. C. Bagliano;Carlo Ambrogio Favero.
European Economic Review (1998)
Is the international propagation of financial shocks non-linear?: Evidence from the ERM
Carlo Ambrogio Favero;Francesco Giavazzi.
Journal of International Economics (2002)
How does liquidity affect government bond yields
Carlo Favero;Marco Pagano;Ernst-Ludwig von Thadden.
Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis (2010)
Testing the lucas critique: A review
Carlo Ambrogio Favero;D. F. Hendry.
Econometric Reviews (1992)
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