13,162 research outputs found
A Unified Growth Model for Independent Chile
This article analyzes long-term patterns of growth of the Chilean economy. Examining 200 years of data, it shows evidence in favor of using a neoclassical growth model to conduct the empirical analysis. It presents a formal analysis of structural breaks in the Chilean growth process, finding structural changes in 1929 and 1971/1981. A further analysis of the country’s economic history indicates that fiscal policy, external shocks and trade policy are plausible explanations for these breaks. When these variables are included in the empirical model, the hypothesis of no breaks during these 200 years cannot be rejected.Chile, structural breaks, growth, fiscal policies, external shocks
Institutional Arrangements to Determine Loan Repayment in Chile
The major objective of this paper is to investigate institutional arrangements as a determinant of loan repayment in the Chilean financial market. A second aim is to analyze the effects of these arrangements on borrowers’ behavior. Although La Porta et al. (1997, 1998) classify Chile as a French Civil Law country, the law and private arrangements have evolved consistently with the capital market development to protect the rights of the creditors. This is consistent with relatively low rates of bad loans, ranking from 1. 1 to 2. 0 percent in 1993-1997. We examine different variables which may be related to loan repayment: (a) limitations on the access to credit, (b) macroeconomic stability, (c) collection technology, (d) bankruptcy code, (e) information sharing, (f) the judicial system, (g) prescreening techniques and (h) major changes in financial market regulation. Based on the discussion presented in the paper plus regression analyses, we conclude that a satisfactory performance of the Chilean credit market, in terms of loan repayments and credit market development, hinges on a good information sharing system, an advanced collection technology, a good macroeconomic performance, credit market development and major changes in financial market regulation.
A multivariate semiparametric Bayesian spatial modeling framework for hurricane surface wind fields
Storm surge, the onshore rush of sea water caused by the high winds and low
pressure associated with a hurricane, can compound the effects of inland
flooding caused by rainfall, leading to loss of property and loss of life for
residents of coastal areas. Numerical ocean models are essential for creating
storm surge forecasts for coastal areas. These models are driven primarily by
the surface wind forcings. Currently, the gridded wind fields used by ocean
models are specified by deterministic formulas that are based on the central
pressure and location of the storm center. While these equations incorporate
important physical knowledge about the structure of hurricane surface wind
fields, they cannot always capture the asymmetric and dynamic nature of a
hurricane. A new Bayesian multivariate spatial statistical modeling framework
is introduced combining data with physical knowledge about the wind fields to
improve the estimation of the wind vectors. Many spatial models assume the data
follow a Gaussian distribution. However, this may be overly-restrictive for
wind fields data which often display erratic behavior, such as sudden changes
in time or space. In this paper we develop a semiparametric multivariate
spatial model for these data. Our model builds on the stick-breaking prior,
which is frequently used in Bayesian modeling to capture uncertainty in the
parametric form of an outcome. The stick-breaking prior is extended to the
spatial setting by assigning each location a different, unknown distribution,
and smoothing the distributions in space with a series of kernel functions.
This semiparametric spatial model is shown to improve prediction compared to
usual Bayesian Kriging methods for the wind field of Hurricane Ivan.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/07-AOAS108 in the Annals of
Applied Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aoas/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
A simple model for the evolution of multi-stranded coronal loops
We develop and analyze a simple cellular automaton (CA) model that reproduces
the main properties of the evolution of soft X-ray coronal loops. We are
motivated by the observation that these loops evolve in three distinguishable
phases that suggest the development, maintainance, and decay of a
self-organized system. The model is based on the idea that loops are made of
elemental strands that are heated by the relaxation of magnetic stress in the
form of nanoflares. In this vision, usually called "the Parker conjecture"
(Parker 1988), the origin of stress is the displacement of the strand
footpoints due to photospheric convective motions. Modeling the response and
evolution of the plasma we obtain synthetic light curves that have the same
characteristic properties (intensity, fluctuations, and timescales) as the
observed cases. We study the dependence of these properties on the model
parameters and find scaling laws that can be used as observational predictions
of the model. We discuss the implications of our results for the interpretation
of recent loop observations in different wavelengths.Comment: 2010, accepted for publication in Ap
On the determinants of the Chilean Economic Growth
This paper presents several methodologies for understanding the Chilean growth process. By using univariate time series representations, we find that the Chilean data is more consistent with exogenous than with endogenous growth models. Growth accounting exercises show that the mild growth rates of the sixties are mainly due to the accumulation of human and physical capital, while the booms of the mid seventies and the one from 1985 until 1998 are mainly due to TFP growth. We also find that among the most important determinants of the evolution of TFP are the evolution of terms of trade, improvements on the quality of capital, and the presence of distortions. In fact, distortions do not only eliminate the positive effects of improvements on the quality of capital, but also precede the evolution of technology shocks and increase their volatility. A dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model that explicitly incorporates the relative price of investment with respect to consumption goods, terms of tra de, and distortionary taxes is able to successfully replicate the impulse-response functions found on the data. This exercise suggests that distortions play a key role in explaining the growth dynamics of the Chilean experience.
- …