Albuquerque

Publications

Shared legacies, disparate outcomes: why American south border cities turned the tables on crime and their Mexican sisters did notJournal articlePedro H. Albuquerque, Crime, Law and Social Change, Volume 47, Issue 2, pp. 69-88, 2007

The article evaluates crime trends in south border American and Mexican sister cities using panel data analysis. The region offers a unique assessment opportunity since cities are characterized by shared cultural and historical legacies, institutional heterogeneity, and disparate crime outcomes. Higher homicide rates on the Mexican side seem to result from deficient law enforcement. Higher population densities in Mexican cities appear to also be a factor. Cultural differences, on the other hand, have been decreasing, and apparently do not play a substantial role. The homicide rate dynamics show opportunistic clustering of criminal activity in Mexican cities, while no clustering is found on the American side. Crime also appears to spill from Mexican cities into American cities. Homicide rates on both sides of the border have been falling faster than countrywide rates, leading, in the case of American cities, and against stereotypes, to rates below the countrywide rate in 2001.

BAD taxation: Disintermediation and illiquidity in a bank account debits tax modelJournal articlePedro H. Albuquerque, International Tax and Public Finance, Volume 13, Issue 5, pp. 601-624, 2006

This paper uses a dynamic general equilibrium model to study the economic effects of bank account debits (BAD) taxation. Australia and various Latin American countries have levied or levy BAD taxes. Aspects such as financial disintermediation, market illiquidity, and impacts on dividend and interest rates are considered. Part of the BAD tax revenue may be fictitious, due to increased interest payments on government debt. The Brazilian BAD tax (CPMF) experience is evaluated. The empirical analysis confirms some theoretical predictions. Incidence base over GDP appears to be sensitive to the tax rate, possibly engendering a Laffer curve. The tax may also cause real interest rates to increase. Furthermore, the deadweight losses are relatively large, even if revenues are small. The theoretical and empirical results suggest that the BAD tax is not adequate for revenue collection. Copyright Springer Science + Business Media, LLC 2006

Are European Stock Markets Influencing Latin American Stock Markets?Journal articleAndrés Rivas, Antonio Rodríguez et Pedro H. Albuquerque, Revista Análisis Económico, Volume XXI, Issue 47, pp. 51-67, 2006

In this study, we examine the response of Latin American stock markets to movements in European stock markets. Our results vary depending on the openness of the country in terms of international trade. We find evidence that Latin American stock markets are affected by Spanish stock market. Additionally, during the second and third-periods (1995 to 1998 and 1999 to 2004) Spain appears to have much stronger ties (such as more trade) with Brazil and Chile, and this might explain why Brazil and Chile are affected from Spain and not from the other European markets. This study uncovers two important findings. First, Spain has an effect on Latin American markets but these responses are not homogeneous across markets. Second, the magnitude of Spain's influence is different in each of the three sub-periods under study.

A practical log-linear aggregation method with examples: heterogeneous income growth in the USAJournal articlePedro H. Albuquerque, Journal of Applied Econometrics, Volume 18, Issue 6, pp. 665-678, 2003

A practical aggregation method for heterogeneous log-linear functions is presented. Inequality measures are employed in the construction of a simple but exact aggregate representation of an economy. Three macroeconomic applications are discussed: the aggregation of the Lucas supply function, the time-inconsistent behaviour of an egalitarian social planner facing heterogeneous discount rates, and the case of a simple heterogeneous growth model. In the latter application, aggregate CPS data is used to show that the slowdown that followed the first oil shock is worse than usually thought, and that the 'new economy' growth resurgence is not as strong as it appears. The reaction of one man could be forecast by no known mathematics; the reaction of a billion is something else again.-Foundation and Empire, Isaac Asimov (1952) Copyright (c)2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.