ElasticSearch Score: 11.587018
    
        
        
        
            This paper studies the effects of financial development, taking into account both formal and informal financing. Using cross-country firm-level data, we document that informal financing is utilized more by rich countries than poor countries.
        
        
     
ElasticSearch Score: 11.106795
    
        
        
        
            We build an otherwise-standard business cycle model with housework, calibrated consistently with data on time use, in order to discipline consumption-hours complementarity and relate its strength to the size of fiscal multipliers.
        
        
     
ElasticSearch Score: 10.847108
    
                 January 30, 2005
        
        
        
        
        
            The Bank of Canada has played an integral role in Canadian society for 70 years. When the Bank opened its doors in the spring of 1935, this country was struggling to define itself and to survive the economic and social turmoil of the Great Depression. Like Canada’s economy, its central bank has evolved and grown over the years. It has faced critical challenges and embraced change. But the Bank’s mandate has not changed. It is now, as it was then, to provide an effective, national monetary authority for Canada.
        
        
     
ElasticSearch Score: 10.19634
    
                 January 30, 2004
        
        
        
        
        
            At the Bank of Canada, we have worked hard over the past several years to define our goals and our methods for achieving them. We have continued to strengthen our monetary policy framework, and we have established priorities in all areas of our operations to help us meet our strategic objectives. In 2002, the Bank set out a medium-term plan for the period 2003–05. The plan’s clearly defined policy frameworks and priorities were critical in guiding our analysis and our decisions in 2003, a year in which Canadians across the country were affected by a number of severe and unanticipated events.
        
        
     
ElasticSearch Score: 9.950201
    
        
        
        
            We study how different types of monetary policy shape the distributional effects of external economic shocks on households’ consumption in a small open economy. Our results present a trade-off between maintaining overall stabilization and controlling consumption inequality.
        
        
     
ElasticSearch Score: 9.8632765
    
        
        
        
            We assess whether unconventional monetary and fiscal policy implemented in response to the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. contribute to the 2021-2023 inflation surge through the lens of several different empirical methodologies and establish a null result.
        
        
     
ElasticSearch Score: 9.492227
    
        
        
        
            The paper examines how the Balassa-Samuelson hypothesis is affected by a modern variation of the standard model that allows product differentiation (within the traded and nontraded goods sectors) with the number of firms determined exogenously or endogenously.
        
        
     
ElasticSearch Score: 9.4496
    
                 January 29, 2001
        
        
        
        
        
            The Canadian economy continued to expand robustly in 2000 while inflation remained low.
        
        
     
ElasticSearch Score: 9.277806
    
        
        
        
            We study the formation of price bubbles on experimental asset markets where cash earns interest. There are two main conclusions.
        
        
     
ElasticSearch Score: 9.181732
    
                 January 30, 2001
        
        
        
        
        
            The year that just passed posed many challenges for all Canadians. The slowdown in the global economy became more pronounced as the year went on, and this affected households, businesses, and governments alike. The tragedy of 11 September compounded the economic difficulties and issues facing us all. Through this period of rapidly changing circumstances, the Bank met its responsibilities by responding quickly and vigorously to events in order to underpin confidence and support the economy.