Dividend Consistency: Rewards, Learning, and Expectations
Published date | 01 December 2019 |
Author | Karyn Neuhauser,David Michayluk,Scott Walker |
DOI | http://doi.org/10.1111/jacf.12381 |
Date | 01 December 2019 |
IN THIS ISSUE:
e Fed
and the
Financial
System
VOLUME 31
NUMBER 4
FALL 2019
APPLIED
CORPORATE FINANCE
Journal of
10 Hamilton and the U.S. Financial Revolution
Richard Sylla, New York University and NBER, and David J. Cowen, Museum of American Finance
16 A Limited Central Bank
Charles I. Plosser, Former President and CEO, Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
21 How to Promote Fed Independence:
Perspectives from Political Economy and History
Charles W. Calomiris, Columbia University and The Hoover Institution
43 e Great Crash of 1929: A Look Back After 90 Years
Robert F. Bruner, University of Virginia, and Scott C. Miller, Yale University
59 e Strange and Futile World of Trade Wars
Steve H. Hanke and Edward Li, Johns Hopkins University
68 Monetary Policy Implementation: Making Better and
More Consistent Use of the Federal Reserve’s Balance Sheet
Peter N. Ireland, Boston College and the Shadow Open Market Committee
77 e Fed’s Communications: Suggestions for Improvement
Mickey D. Levy, Berenberg Capital Markets
86 FinTech, BigTech, and the Future of Banking
René M. Stulz, The Ohio State University
98 Will Blockchain Be a Big Deal? Reasons for Caution
Craig Pirrong, University of Houston
105 Two Modes of Investment Banking:
Technocrats, Relationship Managers, and Conict
Alan D. Morrison and William J. Wilhelm, Jr., University of Oxford and University of Virginia
118 Dividend Consistency: Rewards, Learning, and Expectations
David Michayluk and Scott Walker, University of Technology Sydney,
Karyn Neuhauser, Lamar University
129 e Reference-Driven College Paper
(Or Why Your Students Should Read the JACF)
Joseph W. Trefzger, Illinois State University
To continue reading
Request your trial