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Charles T. Carlstrom

Charles T. Carlstrom

D-Index & Metrics

Economics and Finance

D-Index
34
Citations
9224
World Ranking
3017
National Ranking
1662

Overview

Charles T. Carlstrom was affiliated with the Federal Reserve System in the United States. Their career involved working within this prominent institution responsible for shaping U.S. monetary policy and overseeing financial stability.

No records indicate specific research papers published by Carlstrom, nor details about frequent co-authors or common publication venues. Similarly, there is no information on book publications or the main fields and subfields of scientific study associated with their work.

Available data does not list particular topics of research or awards received during their career. Carlstrom's profile primarily reflects an association with the Federal Reserve System, suggesting involvement in economic or financial research in a governmental or policy-making context.

As Carlstrom is recorded as deceased, all references to their work are in the past tense. The absence of detailed documentation regarding research output and scholarly collaborations limits the assessment of their scientific contributions beyond institutional affiliation.

Best Publications

  • Agency costs, net worth, and business fluctuations: a computable general equilibrium analysis

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Timothy S. Fuerst

  • Agency costs, net worth, and business fluctuations: A

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Timothy S. Fuerst

  • Agency Costs, Net Worth, and Business Fluctuations: A Computable General Equilibrium Analysis

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Timothy Fuerst

  • Inflation and output in New Keynesian models with a transient interest rate peg

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Timothy Stephen Fuerst;Timothy Stephen Fuerst;Matthius Paustian

  • Timing and real indeterminacy in monetary models

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Timothy S. Fuerst;Timothy S. Fuerst

  • Interest rate rules vs. money growth rules a welfare comparison in a cash-in-advance economy

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Timothy S. Fuerst

  • Inflation and output in New Keynesian models with a transient interest rate peg

    Charles T Carlstrom;Timothy S Fuerst;Timothy S Fuerst;Matthias Paustian

  • Investment and interest rate policy: a discrete time analysis

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Timothy S. Fuerst;Timothy S. Fuerst

  • Targeting Long Rates in a Model with Segmented Markets

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Timothy S. Fuerst;Matthias Paustian

  • Forward-Looking Versus Backward-Looking Taylor Rules

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Timothy S. Fuerst

  • Optimal Monetary Policy in a Model with Agency Costs

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Timothy S. Fuerst;Matthias Paustian

  • Interest rate rules vs. money growth rules: a welfare comparison in a cash-in-advance economy

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Timothy S. Fuerst

  • Loan Sales as a Response to Market-Based Capital Constraints

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Katherine A. Samolyk

  • Oil Prices, Monetary Policy, and Counterfactual Experiments

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Timothy Stephen Fuerst

  • Monetary shocks, agency costs, and business cycles

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Timothy S. Fuerst;Timothy S. Fuerst

  • Agency costs and business cycles

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Timothy S. Fuerst

  • The Fiscal Theory of the Price Level

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Timothy S. Fuerst

  • Asset prices, nominal rigidities, and monetary policy

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Timothy S. Fuerst;Timothy S. Fuerst

  • Monetary policy shocks, Choleski identification, and DNK models

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Timothy S. Fuerst;Timothy S. Fuerst;Matthias Paustian

  • Marginal Tax Rates and Income Inequality in a Life-Cycle Model

    David Altig;Charles T. Carlstrom

  • Optimal contracts, aggregate risk and the financial accelerator

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Timothy S. Fuerst;Matthias Paustian

  • CENTRAL BANK INDEPENDENCE AND INFLATION: A NOTE

    Charles T Carlstrom;Timothy S Fuerst

  • Fiscal Multipliers under an Interest Rate Peg of Deterministic versus Stochastic Duration

    Charles T. Carlstrom;Timothy Stephen Fuerst;Matthius Paustian

Frequent Co-Authors

Timothy S. Fuerst
Timothy S. Fuerst University of Notre Dame
Ralph Chami
Ralph Chami International Monetary Fund
Michael T. Owyang
Michael T. Owyang Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Daniel L. Thornton
Daniel L. Thornton Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Jess Benhabib
Jess Benhabib New York University

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Best Scientists Citing Charles T. Carlstrom