Kris James Mitchener’s research while affiliated with Santa Clara University and other places

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Publications (15)


Do disinflation policies ravage Central bank finances?
  • Article

July 2024

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5 Reads

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1 Citation

Economic Policy

Théodore Humann

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Kris James Mitchener

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Eric Monnet

Advanced-economy central banks are currently experiencing losses. To examine how rate-tightening cycles affect central bank finances, we study the financial statements of ten advanced-economy central banks during the 1970s and 1980s, the most notable and comparable policy environment to the present. We find that central bank profits actually increased in response to the anti-inflationary measures of the 1980s. We thus discuss how central bank profits depend on their policy instruments as well as their balance-sheet position when rate tightening begins, rather than on the tightening per se. Unlike today, central banks in the 1980s avoided losses because they did not remunerate bank reserves and their balance sheets did not carry the legacy of a decade of large asset purchases at low interest rates and long maturity. Our counterfactuals show that only a combination of these factors could have triggered losses in the 1980s: none of them is sufficient on its own. When losses emerged in the late 1970s, before the Volcker shock, they were due to foreign-exchange reserves depreciating. In these instances, when central banks carried them forward and did not rely on transfers from the government, there was no loss of central bank independence or their ability to fight inflation.











Citations (4)


... Numerous studies have explored the meanings attributed to money and the variables affecting its conceptual construction (Marodin et al., 2024;Su et al., 2024). For example, Flores and Vieira (2014) developed and validated a model focused on the propensity for indebtedness. ...

Reference:

Money value, risk perception and behavior: evidence from the Brazilian market
Contagion of fear: Panics, money, and the Great Depression
  • Citing Article
  • July 2024

Explorations in Economic History

... Of course, hyperinflations all over the world in general, and in Eastern Europe in particular, are not unknown, and are well-documented and well-understood. The emphasis, however, is virtually always on the reasons and circumstances of their occurrence (Bastian et al., 2024;Siklos & Bohl, 2018;Lopez & Mitchener, 2021;McIndoe-Calder et al., 2019;Martinelli & Antonio 2018). Upon this background, an exception is a study on the inflation effects on human capital (Heylen et al., 2003), finding that moderate rates paradoxically have some positive impact, yet a hyperinflation influences it negatively. ...

Uncertainty and Hyperinflation: European Inflation Dynamics after World War I
  • Citing Article
  • May 2020

The Economic Journal

... (Fisher 1932;Friedman and Schwartz 1963;Grossman 1994;Mitchener and Richardson 2019). We paint a different picture based on a new dataset covering 23 countries. ...

Network Contagion and Interbank Amplification during the Great Depression
  • Citing Article
  • Full-text available
  • October 2018

Journal of Political Economy

... The CPI responses of both countries are consistent with the overall results, as war and geopolitical conflicts tend to cause inflation (Adam et al. 2008). The uncertainty surrounding postwar economic policies also contribute to hyperinflation (Lopez and Mitchener 2021). The war had a more prolonged impact on China's industrial production and CPI than on the United States, potentially due to the latter's leading role in the global economy and the core position of the US dollar in the international monetary system, which may have rendered the US economy less vulnerable. ...

Uncertainty and Hyperinflation: European Inflation Dynamics after World War I
  • Citing Article
  • May 2018