Options
Matthias Weber
Title
Prof. Dr.
Last Name
Weber
First name
Matthias
Email
matthias.weber@unisg.ch
Phone
+41 71 224 70 76
Now showing
1 - 8 of 8
-
PublicationInvestor experience and information do not discourage asset price bubbles( 2022-01-19)
;Kopányi-Peuker, AnitaType: newspaper articleJournal: LSE Business Review -
PublicationDeglobalisation post COVID-19 could spell trouble for the European Monetary Union( 2020-07-01)
;Bertasiute, Akvile ;Massaro, DomenicoLess economic integration would make it difficult for the ECB to stabilise the euro area economies. Symmetric monetary policy cannot do anything about this and individual countries would need to use fiscal policy tools.Type: newspaper articleJournal: LSE Business Review -
PublicationType: newspaper articleJournal: Ökonomenstmme
-
PublicationEurobonds (or Coronabonds) Would not Be Costly for Northern Euro Area Countries( 2020-04-16)Well-designed eurobonds would lower financing costs for many euro area countries while hardly or not increasing the costs for the others. These bonds should have an explicit guarantee from the ECB. The bonds could be used up to a limit of GDP (a low number of 10-25% of GDP would allow to observe market reactions before deciding whether to expand). Their introduction would increase the costs on regular German 10-year bonds by at most 10 to 30 basis points.Type: newspaper articleJournal: LSE Business Review
-
PublicationIn Favor of Rule-Based Monetization of Public Debt( 2020-05-29)The expansive monetary policy conducted by the ECB in the past few years involves risks. However, the typical criticisms of the ECB are unjustified. The euro area would even be well advised to provide the ECB with rule-based monetization of public debt as additional policy instrument.Type: newspaper article
-
PublicationThe German court ruling against ECB asset purchases doesn’t make economic sense( 2020-05-12)The court cannot preclude the ECB and other national central banks from doing it, and the only country to suffer if the Bundesbank stopped participating would be Germany.Type: newspaper articleJournal: LSE Business Review
-
PublicationType: newspaper articleJournal: Ökonomenstimme
-
PublicationType: newspaper articleJournal: Ökonomenstimme