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RBA Glossary definition for macro economy

macro economy – The economy looked at as a whole or in terms of major components measured by aggregates such as gross domestic product, the balance of payments and related links, in the context of the national economy. This contrasts with microeconomics which focuses upon specific firms or industries.

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The Effect of Credit Constraints on Housing Prices: (Further) Evidence from a Survey Experiment

31 Jan 2023 RDP 2023-01
Tom Cusbert
The macro modelling literature is equally divided. Two recent prominent papers reach essentially opposite conclusions. ... That is the average finding, with the effect larger in emerging economies and smaller in advanced economies.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2023/2023-01/full.html
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DSGE Reno: Adding a Housing Block to a Small Open Economy Model

1 Apr 2018 RDP 2018-04
Christopher G Gibbs, Jonathan Hambur and Gabriela Nodari
Households in the world economy may invest in their own and Australian nominal bonds. ... The foreign economy is modelled as a standard closed economy sticky-price model.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2018/2018-04/full.html
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The Role of Collateral in Borrowing

14 Jan 2021 RDP PDF 1784KB
collateral. In addition, the global financial crisis was largely exogenous to the Australian economy. ... modest compared to other advanced economies. With these data, we answer the following questions.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2021/pdf/rdp2021-01.pdf

Labour Market Adjustment: Evidence on Interstate Labour Mobility

1 Dec 2009 RDP PDF 313KB
Section 6 concludes. 2. Theory and Existing Evidence. The Australian states can be considered as a series of small open economies with a fixed exchange rate.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/1998/pdf/rdp9801.pdf

Results with Tax Data on Actual Investment

19 Dec 2023 RDP 2023-09
Sources: ABS; Authors' calculations. The timing of the lags with which monetary policy affects investment is consistent with macro models of the Australian economy such as the RBA's MARTIN (Ballantyne ... The second aspect is whether monetary policy
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2023/2023-09/results-with-tax-data-on-actual-investment.html

The Role of Collateral in Borrowing

20 Jan 2021 RDP 2021-01
Nicholas Garvin, David W Hughes and José-Luis Peydró
In addition, the global financial crisis was largely exogenous to the Australian economy and its interbank market. ... The real estate market did not crash, and the economic slowdown was modest compared to other advanced economies.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2021/2021-01/full.html
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References

1 Dec 1991 RDP 9112
Malcolm Edey, Robin Foster and Ian Macfarlane
36, December 1988. Edey, M.L. and M. Britten-Jones (1990), “Saving and Investment”, in The Australian Macro-economy in the 1980s, Reserve Bank of Australia, 1990.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/1991/9112/references.html

The Impact of Financial Intermediaries on Resource Allocation and Economic Growth

1 Feb 2006 RDP PDF 699KB
The rate at which an economy grows is a positive fullction of the efficiency of this process. ... Romer shows that the equilibrium growth rate in thls economy (g) is given by:.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/1992/pdf/rdp9213.pdf

Where's the Money? An Investigation into the Whereabouts and Uses of Australian Banknotes

1 Dec 2018 RDP 2018-12
Richard Finlay, Andrew Staib and Max Wakefield
1. Introduction. Relatively strong growth in the value of outstanding banknotes has been a consistent feature of the Australian economy for many decades. ... in the late 1990s to around 40 per cent now, or 35 per cent after subtracting cash used in
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2018/2018-12/full.html
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The Effect of Mortgage Debt on Consumer Spending: Evidence from Household-level Data

1 Jul 2019 RDP 2019-06
Fiona Price, Benjamin Beckers and Gianni La Cava
This suggests that a high level of household debt may weigh on spending even when the economy is in a more ‘normal’ phase of the business cycle. ... If debt has no direct effect on spending but affects spending only when there are shocks to income or
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2019/2019-06/full.html
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