Access Statistics for Davide Romelli

Author contact details at EconPapers.

Working Paper File Downloads Abstract Views
Last month 3 months 12 months Total Last month 3 months 12 months Total
Appointements to central bank boards: does gender matter ? 0 0 0 46 0 0 1 81
BEHAVIORAL MONETARY POLICYMAKING: ECONOMICS, POLITICAL ECONOMY AND PSYCHOLOGY 0 0 2 123 0 0 5 113
Banking Supervision and External Autditors: What works best? 0 0 0 25 0 1 1 38
Beyond the Central Bank Independence Veil: New Evidence 0 0 1 66 0 1 5 110
Central Bank Communication and Social Media: From Silence to Twitter 0 1 3 24 2 4 16 44
Central Bank Reforms and Institutions 0 0 0 26 0 1 6 42
Central Bankers as Supervisors: Do Crises Matter? 0 0 0 35 0 0 1 85
Current Account and Real Exchange Rate Changes: The Impact of Trade Openness 0 0 0 33 0 3 3 59
Current Account and Real Exchange Rate changes: the Impact of Trade Openness 0 0 1 36 0 0 4 122
Current Account and Real Exchange Rate changes: the impact of trade openness 0 0 1 64 0 0 5 154
Current account and real exchange rate changes: the impact of trade openness 0 0 1 17 0 2 3 68
Did bank lending stifle innovation in Europe during the Great Recession? 0 0 0 20 2 2 2 28
Disagreement inside the FOMC: New Insights from Tone Analysis 1 1 11 80 1 4 31 239
Do Women Matter in Monetary Policy Boards? 0 0 2 46 0 1 5 81
Fiscal Dominance, Monetary Policy and Exchange Rates: Lessons from Early-Modern Venice 0 2 2 35 1 4 8 28
From Silence to Voice: Monetary Policy, Central Bank Governance and Communication 0 1 1 41 0 3 5 157
Gender and Monetary Policymaking: Trends and Drivers 0 0 5 90 0 2 16 213
Monetary policy and financial markets: evidence from Twitter traffic 0 0 4 29 3 4 339 612
Monetary policy and financial markets: evidence from Twitter traffic 0 0 4 30 2 3 18 56
Optimal Currency Area and European Monetary Membership: Economics and Political Economy 0 0 0 49 0 0 0 45
Political Voice on Monetary Policy: Evidence from the Parliamentary Hearings of the European Central Bank 0 1 1 18 0 1 2 27
Political voice on monetary policy: evidence from the parliamentary hearings of the European Central Bank 1 1 1 5 2 3 4 7
Stabilità e efficienza delle Banche Popolari europee: L’evidenza empirica in Italia e Germania nel periodo 2006-2009 0 0 0 1 1 1 2 9
TWIN PEAKS AND CENTRAL BANKS: ECONOMICS, POLITICAL ECONOMY AND COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS 0 1 3 46 0 1 10 101
The impact of governance and productivity on stock returns in European industrial companies 0 0 0 1 1 1 10 19
The political economy of reforms in central bank design: evidence from a new dataset 0 1 7 136 0 2 25 404
To Be or not to Be a Euro Country? The Behavioural Political Economics of Currency Unions 0 0 0 44 0 0 0 76
Trends in central bank independence: a de-jure perspective 1 5 42 79 8 21 93 106
Tweeting on Monetary Policy and Market Sentiments: The Central Bank Surprise Index 0 0 2 84 0 0 7 136
Unravelling household financial assets and demographic characteristics: a novel data perspective 0 0 0 0 1 3 15 15
Ups and Downs. Central Bank Independence from the Great Inflation to the Great Recession: Theory, Institutions and Empirics 0 1 5 140 0 1 12 193
What do politicians think of technocratic institutions? Experimental Evidence on the European Central Bank 1 1 3 24 2 2 9 20
Women and Governance: Central Bank Boards and Monetary Policy 0 0 6 31 3 6 19 65
Total Working Papers 4 16 108 1,524 29 77 682 3,553


Journal Article File Downloads Abstract Views
Last month 3 months 12 months Total Last month 3 months 12 months Total
Appointments to central bank boards: Does gender matter? 0 0 0 22 2 3 3 96
Banking supervision and external auditors: Theory and empirics 0 1 3 15 0 2 10 84
Central Bank Reforms and Institutions 0 0 2 6 0 0 4 39
Central bank communication and social media: From silence to Twitter 1 2 6 6 7 15 50 50
Central bankers as supervisors: Do crises matter? 0 1 5 30 0 5 15 170
Competition and Innovation in the Financial Sector: Evidence from the Rise of FinTech Start-ups 0 0 4 4 2 4 13 14
Current account and real exchange rate changes: The impact of trade openness 1 1 4 49 1 2 9 205
Did financial frictions stifle R&D investment in Europe during the great recession? 0 0 1 4 0 1 5 30
Dynamic central bank independence indices and inflation rate: A new empirical exploration 1 1 9 193 1 6 27 535
Political voice on monetary policy: Evidence from the parliamentary hearings of the European Central Bank 2 2 7 18 2 6 20 54
The political economy of reforms in Central Bank design: evidence from a new dataset 0 2 7 7 1 7 25 25
Ups and downs of central bank independence from the Great Inflation to the Great Recession: theory, institutions and empirics 0 0 3 101 0 2 10 263
Total Journal Articles 5 10 51 455 16 53 191 1,565


Book File Downloads Abstract Views
Last month 3 months 12 months Total Last month 3 months 12 months Total
Central banking and monetary policy: Which will be the post-crisis new normal? Abstract: Central Bankers are currently facing big challenges in designing and implementing monetary policy, as well as with safeguarding financial stability, with the world economy still in the process of digesting the legacy of the crisis. The crisis has changed central banking in many ways: by shifting the focus of monetary policy from fighting too high inflation towards fighting too low inflation; by prompting new ‘experimental’ non-conventional measures, which risk to cause large, long-lasting market distortions and imbalances and which also have more far-reaching distributional consequences than ‘normal, conventional’ monetary policy; and by broadening central banks’ responsibilities particularly in the direction of safeguarding banking stability and financial stability at large. This raises several questions for the future: How long will ultra-easy monetary policies last? What are post-crisis growth trajectories, and how will the natural rate of interest rates evolve? How could an exit from ultra-easy monetary policy and a return towards higher nominal interest rates be eventually managed smoothly? Does ultra-easy monetary policy itself affect the economy in a lasting and structural way? Is the pre-crisis economic paradigm governing monetary policy still valid? If not, in what ways should it be adjusted? Are there any reasonable and practical alternatives? Against this background and given the larger post-crisis range of central banks’ responsibilities: is the current institutionalset-up governing central banks and their relationship to government, Parliament and the financial system still appropriate? What adaptations might be considered? Would they bring an improvement or, on the contrary, a set-back to the unsuccessful policy approaches of the 1960s and 1970s? 0 0 0 30 0 0 3 146
New Challenges in Central Banking:Monetary Policy Governance and Macroprudential Issues 0 0 2 84 0 0 6 247
The SSM at 1 0 0 0 23 2 4 6 133
Total Books 0 0 2 137 2 4 15 526


Chapter File Downloads Abstract Views
Last month 3 months 12 months Total Last month 3 months 12 months Total
Behavioral Monetary Policymaking: Economics, Political Economy and Psychology 0 0 1 16 0 0 1 65
Total Chapters 0 0 1 16 0 0 1 65


Statistics updated 2025-03-03