Report NEP-OPM-2026-01-19
This is the archive for NEP-OPM, a report on new working papers in the area of Open Economy Macroeconomics. Martin Berka issued this report. It is usually issued weekly.Subscribe to this report: email, RSS, or Mastodon, or Bluesky.
Other reports in NEP-OPM
The following items were announced in this report:
- Swapan-Kumar Pradhan & Eswar S. Prasad & Judit Temesvary, 2025, "Dollarization Waves: New Evidence from a Comprehensive International Bond Database," International Finance Discussion Papers, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (U.S.), number 1429, Dec, DOI: 10.17016/IFDP.2025.1429.
- Jorge Miranda-Pinto & Eugenio Rojas & Felipe Saffie & Alvaro Silva, 2025, "Connected for Better or Worse? The Role of Production Networks in Financial Crises," Working Papers, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, number 26-1, Dec, DOI: 10.29412/res.wp.2026.01.
- Dinggao Liu & Robert 'Slepaczuk & Zhenpeng Tang, 2025, "EXFormer: A Multi-Scale Trend-Aware Transformer with Dynamic Variable Selection for Foreign Exchange Returns Prediction," Papers, arXiv.org, number 2512.12727, Dec, revised Jan 2026.
- Katharina Bergant & Andrés Fernández & Ken Teoh & Martín Uribe, 2026, "Expanding the Landscape of Cross-Border Flow Restrictions: Modern Tools and Historical Perspectives," NBER Working Papers, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc, number 34615, Jan.
- Gern, Klaus-Jürgen & Kooths, Stefan & Krohn, Johanna & Liu, Wan-Hsin & Reents, Jan, 2025, "World Economy in Winter 2025: Continued headwinds restrain expansion," Kiel Institute Economic Outlook, Kiel Institute for the World Economy (IfW Kiel), number 128.
- Uluc Aysun & Melanie Guldi, 2026, "Revisiting exchange rate predictability: Can machine learning with theoretical filtering outperform canonical models?," Working Papers, University of Central Florida, Department of Economics, number 2026-01, Jan.
Printed from https://ideas.repec.org/n/nep-opm/2026-01-19.html