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Yaz Terajima
Yaz Terajima
Research Advisor
Bank of Canada
234 Wellington Street
Ottawa, ON K1A 0G9

Curriculum vitae

Yaz Terajima

Research Advisor

About Yaz Terajima

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Bank of Canada publications

  1. Canadian Bank Balance-Sheet Management: Breakdown by Types of Canadian Financial Institutions

    The authors document leverage, capital and liquidity ratios of banks in Canada. These ratios are important indicators of different types of risk with respect to a bank’s balance‐sheet management. Particular attention is given to the observations by different types of banks, including small banks that historically received less attention.

    Topics: Financial Institutions; Financial stability; Financial system regulation and policies
  2. An Analysis of Indicators of Balance-Sheet Risks at Canadian Financial Institutions

    This article examines four indicators of balance-sheet risks—leverage, capital, asset liquidity and funding—among different types of financial institutions in Canada over the past three decades. It also discusses relevant developments in the banking sector that could have contributed to the observed dynamics. The authors find that the various risk indicators decreased during the period for most of the non-Big Six financial institutions, but remained relatively unchanged for the Big Six banks. In addition, the balance-sheet risk indicators became more heterogeneous across financial institutions. The observed overall decline and increased heterogeneity follow certain regulatory changes, such as the introduction of the liquidity guidelines on funding in 1995 and the implementation of bank-specific leverage requirements in 2000. Given that these regulations required more balance-sheet risk management, they have likely contributed to the increased resilience of the banking sector.

    Topics: Financial Institutions; Financial stability; Financial system regulation and policies
  3. Leverage, Balance Sheet Size and Wholesale Funding

    Working Paper 2010-39 - H. Evren Damar, Césaire Meh, Yaz Terajima

    Some evidence points to the procyclicality of leverage among financial institutions leading to aggregate volatility. This procyclicality occurs when financial institutions finance their assets with non-equity funding (i.e., debt financed asset expansions). Wholesale funding is an important source of market-based funding that allows some institutions to quickly adjust their leverage.

    Topics: Financial stability; Financial system regulation and policies; Recent economic and financial developments
  4. Household Debt, Assets, and Income in Canada: A Microdata Study

    Discussion Paper 2009-7 - Césaire Meh, Yaz Terajima, David Xiao Chen, Tom Carter

    The authors use microdata from the 1999 and 2005 Surveys of Financial Security to identify changes in household debt, and discuss their potential implications for monetary policy and financial stability. They document an increase in the debt-income ratio, which rose from 0.75 to 0.95, on average.

    Topics: Credit and credit aggregates; Financial stability; Productivity; Sectoral balance sheet
  5. Real Effects of Price Stability with Endogenous Nominal Indexation

    Working Paper 2009-16 - Césaire Meh, Vincenzo Quadrini, Yaz Terajima

    We study a model with repeated moral hazard where financial contracts are not fully indexed to inflation because nominal prices are observed with delay as in Jovanovic & Ueda (1997). More constrained firms sign contracts that are less indexed to the nominal price and, as a result, their investment is more sensitive to nominal price [...]

    Topics: Economic models; Financial markets; Monetary policy framework; Transmission of monetary policy
  6. Price-Level Uncertainty, Price-Level Targeting, and Nominal Debt Contracts

    Many central banks around the world have embraced inflation targeting as a monetary policy framework. Interest is growing, however, in price-level targeting as an alternative. The choice of frameworks has important consequences for financial contracts, most of which are not fully indexed to the price level. Changes in the price level therefore lead to changes in the real value of contracts. Price-level targeting would reduce the size of these changes in real wealth and decrease uncertainty about the future price level. This article assesses the merits of price-level targeting vis-à-vis inflation targeting from a debt-revaluation perspective, with a focus on channels affecting risk premiums, the maturities of nominal debt contracts, and redistribution of wealth. A general conclusion flowing from the analysis is that accounting for the revaluation of nominal debts and assets strengthens the relative merits of price-level targeting compared with inflation-targeting.

    Topics: Inflation targets; Inflation: costs and benefits; Monetary policy framework
  7. Unexpected Inflation and Redistribution of Wealth in Canada

    One of the most important arguments in favour of price stability is that unexpected inflation generates changes in the distribution of income and wealth among different economic agents. These redistributions occur because many loans are specified in fixed dollar terms and unexpected inflation redistributes wealth from creditors to debtors by reducing the real value of nominal assets and liabilities. This article quantifies the redistributional effects of unexpected inflation in Canada, providing comprehensive evidence of the nominal assets and liabilities of various economic sectors and household groups. A key finding is that the redistributional effects of unexpected inflation are large even with episodes of low inflation. The main winners are young, middle-income households who are major holders of fixed-rate mortgage debt and the government–inflation reduces the real burden of their debt. The losers are high-income households and middle-aged, middle-income households that hold long-term bonds and non-indexed pension wealth.

    Topics: Central bank research; Inflation and prices; Inflation: costs and benefits; Sectoral balance sheet
  8. Uninsurable Investment Risks and Capital Income Taxation

    Working Paper 2009-3 - Césaire Meh, Yaz Terajima

    This paper studies the capital accumulation and welfare implications of reducing capital income taxation in a general equilibrium economy with uninsurable investment risks. It has been shown that, with uninsurable investment risks, under-accumulation of capital may result compared to the complete markets economy. We show that reducing somewhat the capital income tax rate increases the [...]

    Topics: Economic models
  9. Firm Size and Productivity

    Working Paper 2008-45 - Danny Leung, Césaire Meh, Yaz Terajima

    This paper examines the relationship between firm size and productivity. In contrast to previous studies, this paper offers evidence of the relationship not only from manufacturing firms, but from non-manufacturing firms as well. Furthermore, the aggregate importance of the firm size-productivity relationship is gauged by calculating to what extent shifts in the distribution of employment [...]

    Topics: Productivity
  10. Are There Canada-U.S. Differences in SME Financing?

    Working Paper 2008-41 - Danny Leung, Césaire Meh, Yaz Terajima

    Previous surveys of Canadian and U.S. business owners suggest that access to financing in Canada may be more problematic than in the United States. Using the 2003 Survey of Small Business Financing in the United States and the 2004 Survey on Financing of Small and Medium Enterprises in Canada, this paper examines whether this perception can be better quantified.

    Topics: Financial services
  11. Productivity in Canada: Does Firm Size Matter?

    The research findings highlighted in this article suggest that firm-size differences play a significant role in explaining the productivity gap between Canada and the United States. The authors review factors that lead to a positive relationship between productivity and size and then look at Canadian evidence of this relationship at the firm level. They quantify the extent to which the change in Canadian productivity as well as the Canada-U.S. productivity differences can be accounted for by the change in the importance of large firms and identify several factors that play a role in determining average firm size and aggregate productivity.

    Topics: Productivity
  12. Aggregate and Welfare Effects of Redistribution of Wealth Under Inflation and Price-Level Targeting

    Since the work of Doepke and Schneider (2006a) and Meh and Terajima (2008), we know that inflation causes major redistribution of wealth – between households and the government, between nationals and foreigners, and between households within the same country.

    Topics: Economic models; Inflation and prices; Inflation targets; Inflation: costs and benefits; Monetary policy framework; Sectoral balance sheet
  13. Inflation, Nominal Portfolios, and Wealth Redistribution in Canada

    Working Paper 2008-19 - Césaire Meh, Yaz Terajima

    There is currently a policy debate on potential refinements to monetary policy regimes in countries with low and stable inflation such as the U.S. and Canada. For example, in Canada, a systematic review of the current inflation targeting framework is underway.

    Topics: Inflation and prices; Inflation targets; Inflation: costs and benefits; Monetary policy framework; Sectoral balance sheet
  14. A Tool for Assessing Financial Vulnerabilities in the Household Sector

    In this article, the authors build on the framework used in the Bank of Canada's Financial System Review to assess the evolution of household indebtedness and financial vulnerabilities in response to changing economic conditions. To achieve this, they first compare two microdata sets generated by Ipsos Reid's Canadian Financial Monitor and Statistics Canada's Survey of Financial Security. They find that the surveys are broadly comparable, despite methodological differences. This enables them to use the combined information content for the identification of the threshold value of the debt-service ratio (DSR). The article then presents an innovative framework that uses household-level microdata to simulate changes in the distribution of the DSR under various stress scenarios. The authors show how this framework can be used by analyzing the effects of two different scenarios on the distribution of the debt-service ratio and the impact on vulnerable households. This tool will enable researchers to refine their analyses of current risks to the financial health of Canadian households. The article concludes with comments on future directions for refining the Bank's analyses of household sector risk.

    Topics: Econometric and statistical methods; Economic models; Financial stability
  15. Unsecured Debt, Consumer Bankruptcy, and Small Business

    Working Paper 2008-5 - Césaire Meh, Yaz Terajima

    In this paper we develop a quantitative model of entrepreneurial activity (risk-taking) and consumer bankruptcy choices and use the model to study the effects of bankruptcy regulations on entrepreneurial activity, bankruptcy rate and welfare. We show that eliminating bankruptcy exemptions leads to a modest increase in the fraction of entrepreneurs, a large decrease in the [...]

    Topics: Economic models; Financial stability; Financial system regulation and policies
  16. Education and Self-Employment: Changes in Earnings and Wealth Inequality

    Working Paper 2006-40 - Yaz Terajima

    The author quantitatively studies the interaction between education and occupation choices and its implication for the relationship between the changes in earnings inequality and the changes in wealth inequality in the United States over the 1983–2001 period.

    Topics: Economic models; Labour markets
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Education

  • Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania (2004)
  • M.A. Claremont Graduate University (1998)
  • B.A. in economics, University of Hawaii at Hilo (1995)
  • B.A. in business, University of Hawaii at Hilo (1995)

Research Interests

  • macroeconomics
  • quantitative macroeconomic theory
  • monetary policy
  • firm dynamics
  • labor economics
  • financial economics

Publications

Refereed Journals

  • "Inflation, Nominal Portfolios, and Wealth Redistribution in Canada,"
    (with Césaire A. Meh), Canadian Journal of Economics 44(4), 1369-1402 (2011).
  • "Aggregate and Welfare Effects of Redistribution of Wealth Under Inflation and Price-Level Targeting,"
    (with Césaire A. Meh and José-Víctor Ríos-Rull), Journal of Monetary Economics 57(6), 637-652 (2010).
  • "Uninsurable Investment Risks and Capital Income Taxation,"
    (with Césaire A. Meh). Annals of Finance 5(3), 521-541 (2009).
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