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For release: Nov. 1, 2007
St. Louis Fed's Review: The Determinants
of Aid in the Post-Cold War Era; The Decline in the U.S. Personal
Saving Rate: Is It Real and Is It a Puzzle?; Measuring Commercial
Bank Profitability: Proceed with Caution; Open Market Operations
and the Federal Funds Rate
ST. LOUIS, Mo. — The November/December issue
of Review, the Federal Reserve Bank of
St. Louis' journal of economic and business issues, features the
following articles. The publication is also available on the St.
Louis Fed's web site: http://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/review/.
- "The Determinants of Aid in the Post-Cold War
Era." Why is development aid given to other countries?
Using data from the World Bank, economists Subhayu Bandyopadhyay
and Howard J. Wall estimate the responsiveness of aid to recipient
countries' economic and physical needs, civil and political rights,
and government effectiveness. Looking exclusively at the post-Cold
War era, they find that the level of aid given to a country tends
to increase along with the country's infant mortality rate, civil
and political rights and government effectiveness. At the same
time, they find that aid decreases with a recipient country's
rise in per capita GDP.
- "The Decline in the U.S. Personal Saving Rate:
Is It Real and Is It a Puzzle?" Recent stories in
the media have raised alarms that Americans' rate of saving is
at its lowest level since 1933—the bleakest year of the
Great Depression. In addition, data on households' debt service
payments as a percent of personal income have reached all-time
highs. Economist Massimo Guidolin and researcher Elizabeth A.
La Jeunesse examine the measurement problems surrounding two of
the standard definitions of the personal saving rate. Despite
these problems, they find that the recent decline in the U.S.
personal saving rate seems to be a real economic phenomenon and
may be a cause for concern. After examining several possible explanations
for this from other research for this trend, Guidolin and La Jeunesse
conclude that none of them provides a compelling explanation for
the steep decline and negative levels of the U.S. personal saving
rate.
- "Measuring Commercial Bank Profitability: Proceed
with Caution." The federal tax code creates challenges
for comparing the profit rates of different banks on a consistent
basis. The earnings of banks that elect to operate under sub-chapter
"S" of the federal tax code, for example, are not subject
to federal corporate income tax, but shareholders of these S-banks
are taxed on their pro rata share of the entire earnings of the
bank. The number of banks electing sub-chapter S tax treatment
has increased rapidly, especially among small banks. Economists
R. Alton Gilbert and David C. Wheelock use estimates of the federal
corporate income tax that S-banks would pay if they were subject
to the tax to show that the difference in tax treatment of S-banks
and other banks has a large impact on measures of profitability
of the U.S. banking system. In addition, Gilbert and Wheelock's
research indicates that adjustment of S-bank earnings for federal
income taxes to make them comparable to the earnings of earnings
of other banks can markedly affect conclusions of studies that
use income as a measure of performance. They conclude that S-banks—even
after their earnings are reduced by estimated federal taxes—tend
to out-earn their peers and tend to have higher earnings rates
than their peers in the year before they elect S-bank status.
- "Open Market Operations and the Federal Funds
Rate." It's commonly believed that the Federal Reserve's
ability to control the federal funds rate derives from its ability
to alter the supply of liquidity in the overnight market through
open market operations at the Fed's Trading Desk at the New York
Fed. Using daily data from the Desk from March 1, 1984, through
Dec. 31, 1996, economist Daniel L. Thornton analyzes the use of
the Desk's operating procedure in implementing monetary policy
and the extent to which open market operations affect the fed
funds rate—in other words, the liquidity effect. While he
finds that the operating procedure was used to guide daily open
market operations, there is little evidence of a liquidity effect
at the daily frequency and even less evidence at lower frequencies.
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