« Back to Results
Marriott Marquis, Presidio 2
Hosted By:
American Economic Association
Political Economy
Paper Session
Sunday, Jan. 5, 2020 1:00 PM - 3:00 PM (PDT)
- Chair: Ruixue Jia, University of California-San Diego
Policy Uncertainty and Bank Mortgage Credit
Abstract
We document that banks reduce supply of jumbo mortgage loans when policy uncertainty increases as measured by the timing of US gubernatorial elections in banks' headquarter states. The reduction is larger for term-limited elections and close elections. We utilize high-frequency, geographically granular loan-level data to address an identification problem arising from changing demand for loans: (1) the data allows for a difference-in-difference specification with state/time fixed effects; (2) the results hold at the county level; (3) banks reduce lending not just in their home states but also outside their home states when their home states hold elections; (4) we observe important cross-sectional differences in the way banks with different characteristics respond to policy uncertainty. Overall, the findings suggest that policy uncertainty has a real effect on residential housing markets through banks' credit supply decisions and that it can spill over across states through lending by banks serving multiple states.The Impact of United States Presidential Debates on Exchange Rates
Abstract
In this paper, we study the impact of United States (US) presidential election debates on exchange rates of 96 currencies from 1996 to 2016, covering 21 debates. We show that presidential debates are followed by an immediate depreciation of the US dollar against foreign currencies that can be driven by a resolution of uncertainty. This is even stronger for heavily traded currencies. However, the trend reverses in the course of the following day, the US dollar significantly appreciates against foreign currencies. An interaction of the changing intraday election probabilities of the candidates with their policy positions and macroeconomic variables of underlying countries can explain a country-specific heterogeneous transmission of presidential debates on exchange rates. We find that currencies of countries with high real integration (trade) with the US statistically significantly depreciate if the winner of the debate promotes more protectionism than his opponent. However, the effect is only short-term and disappears on the following day. We find no support for policy positions that promote military, internationalism and immigration. The results indicate that the candidates’ positions regarding protectionism is the main channel of interest for exchange rate determination immediately after US presidential debates.The Economic Consequences of Political Hierarchy: Evidence from Regime Changes in China, AD1000-2000
Abstract
TBDJEL Classifications
- P1 - Capitalist Systems