Sélectionner | Date Date | Titre Titre | |||
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No. 1734 | 08 Dec 2022 |
The pass-through of the monetary policy rate into lending rates in Mexico
This paper estimates the pass-through of monetary policy rates into five lending rates in Mexico using auto regressive distributed lags models (ARDLs) and taking into account several financial market characteristics. Results show that the... |
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No. 1733 | 30 Nov 2022 |
Strengthening the social safety net in Korea
Social protection in Korea is designed around traditional forms of employment and excludes a substantial share of workers in non-standard employment. The resulting social protection gaps compound income inequality and undermine financial... |
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No. 1732 | 21 Nov 2022 |
Estimating the CO2 emission and revenue effects of carbon pricing
This paper estimates the long-run elasticity of emissions and carbon-related government revenues to carbon pricing. It is based on the OECD Effective Carbon Rates database, the most comprehensive cross-country longitudinal database on direct and... |
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No. 1731 | 21 Nov 2022 |
Measuring data as an asset
Data are shown to generate efficiency gains but to have been unevenly shared across firms and households, and the subpar economic performance of most advanced economies (prior to the pandemic) has been attributed to increased market power... |
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No. 1730 | 21 Oct 2022 |
Does faster internet increase exports? Evidence from New Zealand
This paper explores the relationship between adoption of ultra-fast broadband (UFB) and the export propensity of New Zealand firms. Previous literature have shown that the Internet facilitates exports by reducing search costs and informational... |
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No. 1729 | 17 Oct 2022 |
Quantifying the macroeconomic impact of COVID-19-related school closures through the human capital channel
This paper uses a new measure of human capital, which distinguishes both quality and quantity components, to estimate the long-term effect of the COVID-19-related school closures on aggregate productivity through the human capital channel.... |
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No. 1728 | 10 Oct 2022 |
Determinants of and barriers to people’s financial inclusion in Mexico
Individuals’ access to finance is particularly low in Mexico. Widening access to finance would boost growth and inclusion. This paper uses microdata from the National Survey for Financial Inclusion to assess the drivers of and the barriers to... |
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No. 1727 | 10 Oct 2022 |
Improving skills and employment opportunities in Tunisia
Unemployment rates have been persistently high, particularly for young labour market entrants. Rising access to education has increased the supply of high-skilled labour, but the private sector has mainly created jobs in low-skill intensive and... |
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No. 1726 | 27 Sept 2022 |
Digitalising the economy in Slovenia
This paper discusses key priorities and policy recommendations to accelerate Slovenia’s digital transformation. The government’s ambitious digitalisation strategy (Digital Slovenia 2030 Strategy) aims at putting Slovenia among the five most... |
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No. 1725 | 08 Aug 2022 |
Anti-corruption and public integrity strategies - Insights from new OECD indicators
The OECD’s new Public Integrity Indicators offer a credible alternative to existing corruption-related indices, as they draw directly on data from member countries instead of expert views. The indicators unpack the general notion of corruption into... |
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No. 1724 | 26 Aug 2022 |
Measuring and assessing the effects of climate policy uncertainty
This study proposes a new indicator of Climate Policy Uncertainty based on newspaper coverage frequency. The indicator currently includes 12 OECD Member Countries and covers the period 1990-2018. The index spikes near major political events and... |
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No. 1723 | 08 Aug 2022 |
The value of data in digital-based business models: Measurement and economic policy implications
A defining aspect of the digital age is data and its business use. Data have become an important input for firms (e.g., to train artificial intelligence algorithms) but data use is neither accounted for in macroeconomic statistics nor part of... |
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No. 1722 | 18 Jul 2022 |
Improving economic opportunities for all in Belgium
Income inequality is low in Belgium, and intergenerational income mobility is on par with the average OECD economy. However, as in other OECD countries, there is scope to improve equal access to opportunities across the population. Poverty risks are... |
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No. 1721 | 15 Jul 2022 |
The post-COVID-19 rise in labour shortages
The labour market recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic has been strong among advanced countries, partly reflecting massive and unprecedented policy support to workers and firms. This paper provides evidence and stylised facts about labour market... |
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No. 1720 | 04 Jul 2022 |
Fostering a strong labour market to support the recovery and sustain growth in Switzerland
Switzerland has a well-functioning labour market with low unemployment, a highly skilled workforce and well-paid jobs. It has proved resilient during the COVID-19 crisis, helped by extensive government support to employment and incomes. As activity... |
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No. 1719 | 23 Jun 2022 |
Mastering the transition: A synthetic literature review of trade adaptation policies
International trade has supported economic convergence and poverty reductions in many emerging market economies. Nonetheless, there are significant challenges during the transition towards a more open economy. Reallocations of resources and... |
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No. 1718 | 22 Jun 2022 |
The effect of structural reforms: Do they differ between GDP and adjusted household disposable income?
The paper considers whether structural reforms have a different impact on adjusted household disposable income (AHDI) compared to GDP, particularly given that while the latter is currently used as the basis for the OECD Economics Department’s... |
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No. 1717 | 03 Jun 2022 |
Expanding access to finance to boost growth and reduce inequalities in Mexico
The access to formal financial services in Mexico is particularly low. Access is also significantly unequal across income levels, gender, between rural and urban areas and across regions. SMEs access to bank credit is low, hampering firms’ ability to... |
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No. 1716 | 19 May 2022 |
Reaping efficiency gains through product market reforms in China
The impressive emergence of China’s economy is set to lose some momentum as the country catches up with more advanced economies and its rapid ageing also weighs on it. However, China can still reap the “reform dividend”, especially with measures to... |
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No. 1715 | 19 May 2022 |
Filling in the gaps: Expanding social protection in Colombia
The pandemic has highlighted significant gaps in social protection, in particularamong informal workers. With around 60% of workers in informal jobs, many of those most in need of social protection are left behind. The government has attempted to... |
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Documents de travail du Département des Affaires économiques de l'OCDE
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- https://doi.org/10.1787/18151973
81 - 100 of 1840 results
The pass-through of the monetary policy rate into lending rates in Mexico
Alessandro Maravalle et Alberto González Pandiella
08 Dec 2022
This paper estimates the pass-through of monetary policy rates into five lending rates in Mexico using auto regressive distributed lags models (ARDLs) and taking into account several financial market characteristics. Results show that the...
Strengthening the social safety net in Korea
Hyunjeong Hwang, Axel Purwin et Jon Pareliussen
30 Nov 2022
Social protection in Korea is designed around traditional forms of employment and excludes a substantial share of workers in non-standard employment. The resulting social protection gaps compound income inequality and undermine financial...
Estimating the CO2 emission and revenue effects of carbon pricing
Filippo Maria D’Arcangelo, Mauro Pisu, Anasuya Raj et Kurt van Dender
21 Nov 2022
This paper estimates the long-run elasticity of emissions and carbon-related government revenues to carbon pricing. It is based on the OECD Effective Carbon Rates database, the most comprehensive cross-country longitudinal database on direct and...
Measuring data as an asset
Carol Corrado, Jonathan Haskel, Massimiliano Iommi et Cecilia Jona-Lasinio
21 Nov 2022
Data are shown to generate efficiency gains but to have been unevenly shared across firms and households, and the subpar economic performance of most advanced economies (prior to the pandemic) has been attributed to increased market power...
Does faster internet increase exports? Evidence from New Zealand
Lynda Sanderson, Garrick Wright-McNaughton et Naomitsu Yashiro
21 Oct 2022
This paper explores the relationship between adoption of ultra-fast broadband (UFB) and the export propensity of New Zealand firms. Previous literature have shown that the Internet facilitates exports by reducing search costs and informational...
Quantifying the macroeconomic impact of COVID-19-related school closures through the human capital channel
Christine de la Maisonneuve, Balázs Égert et David Turner
17 Oct 2022
This paper uses a new measure of human capital, which distinguishes both quality and quantity components, to estimate the long-term effect of the COVID-19-related school closures on aggregate productivity through the human capital channel....
Determinants of and barriers to people’s financial inclusion in Mexico
Steven Cassimon, Alessandro Maravalle, Alberto González Pandiella et Lou Turroques
10 Oct 2022
Individuals’ access to finance is particularly low in Mexico. Widening access to finance would boost growth and inclusion. This paper uses microdata from the National Survey for Financial Inclusion to assess the drivers of and the barriers to...
Improving skills and employment opportunities in Tunisia
Robert Grundke et Steven Cassimon
10 Oct 2022
Unemployment rates have been persistently high, particularly for young labour market entrants. Rising access to education has increased the supply of high-skilled labour, but the private sector has mainly created jobs in low-skill intensive and...
Digitalising the economy in Slovenia
Lucia Russo, Jens-Christian Høj et Martin Borowiecki
27 Sept 2022
This paper discusses key priorities and policy recommendations to accelerate Slovenia’s digital transformation. The government’s ambitious digitalisation strategy (Digital Slovenia 2030 Strategy) aims at putting Slovenia among the five most...
Anti-corruption and public integrity strategies - Insights from new OECD indicators
Zuzana Smidova, Agnès Cavaciuti et Jesper Johnsøn
08 Aug 2022
The OECD’s new Public Integrity Indicators offer a credible alternative to existing corruption-related indices, as they draw directly on data from member countries instead of expert views. The indicators unpack the general notion of corruption into...
Measuring and assessing the effects of climate policy uncertainty
Clara Berestycki, Stefano Carattini, Antoine Dechezleprêtre et Tobias Kruse
26 Aug 2022
This study proposes a new indicator of Climate Policy Uncertainty based on newspaper coverage frequency. The indicator currently includes 12 OECD Member Countries and covers the period 1990-2018. The index spikes near major political events and...
The value of data in digital-based business models: Measurement and economic policy implications
Carol Corrado, Jonathan Haskel, Massimiliano Iommi et Cecilia Jona-Lasinio
08 Aug 2022
A defining aspect of the digital age is data and its business use. Data have become an important input for firms (e.g., to train artificial intelligence algorithms) but data use is neither accounted for in macroeconomic statistics nor part of...
Improving economic opportunities for all in Belgium
Nicolas Gonne
18 Jul 2022
Income inequality is low in Belgium, and intergenerational income mobility is on par with the average OECD economy. However, as in other OECD countries, there is scope to improve equal access to opportunities across the population. Poverty risks are...
The post-COVID-19 rise in labour shortages
Orsetta Causa, Michael Abendschein, Nhung Luu, Emilia Soldani et Chiara Soriolo
15 Jul 2022
The labour market recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic has been strong among advanced countries, partly reflecting massive and unprecedented policy support to workers and firms. This paper provides evidence and stylised facts about labour market...
Fostering a strong labour market to support the recovery and sustain growth in Switzerland
Veronique Salins et Urban Sila
04 Jul 2022
Switzerland has a well-functioning labour market with low unemployment, a highly skilled workforce and well-paid jobs. It has proved resilient during the COVID-19 crisis, helped by extensive government support to employment and incomes. As activity...
Mastering the transition: A synthetic literature review of trade adaptation policies
Robert Grundke et Jens Matthias Arnold
23 Jun 2022
International trade has supported economic convergence and poverty reductions in many emerging market economies. Nonetheless, there are significant challenges during the transition towards a more open economy. Reallocations of resources and...
The effect of structural reforms: Do they differ between GDP and adjusted household disposable income?
Jarmila Botev, Balázs Égert et David Turner
22 Jun 2022
The paper considers whether structural reforms have a different impact on adjusted household disposable income (AHDI) compared to GDP, particularly given that while the latter is currently used as the basis for the OECD Economics Department’s...
Expanding access to finance to boost growth and reduce inequalities in Mexico
Alessandro Maravalle et Alberto González Pandiella
03 Jun 2022
The access to formal financial services in Mexico is particularly low. Access is also significantly unequal across income levels, gender, between rural and urban areas and across regions. SMEs access to bank credit is low, hampering firms’ ability to...
Reaping efficiency gains through product market reforms in China
Margit Molnar
19 May 2022
The impressive emergence of China’s economy is set to lose some momentum as the country catches up with more advanced economies and its rapid ageing also weighs on it. However, China can still reap the “reform dividend”, especially with measures to...
Filling in the gaps: Expanding social protection in Colombia
Paula Garda et Jens Matthias Arnold
19 May 2022
The pandemic has highlighted significant gaps in social protection, in particularamong informal workers. With around 60% of workers in informal jobs, many of those most in need of social protection are left behind. The government has attempted to...