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Sarah Zubairy

Institution: Texas A&M University

Primary Field: Macro (weighted toward more recent publications)

Homepage: http://www.sarahzubairy.com

First Publication: 2011

Most Recent: 2025

RePEc ID: pzu31 ↗

Publication Scores

Scores use coauthorship adjustment: α/n credit per paper, where n = number of authors. α = 2.02: calibrated so average adjusted count equals average raw count (a zero-sum adjustment).

Period S (4x) A (2x) B (1x) C (½x) Total Percentile
Last 5 Years 0.00 4.04 2.35 0.00 6.39 89%
Last 10 Years 4.04 4.04 7.06 0.00 15.14 95%
All Time 6.73 4.04 11.10 0.00 21.86 94%

Publication Statistics

Raw Publications 15
Coauthorship-Adjusted Count 14.80

Publications (15)

Year Article Journal Tier Authors
2025 State-Dependent Government Spending Multipliers: Downward Nominal Wage Rigidity and Sources of Business Cycle Fluctuations American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics A 2
2024 Household Debt and the Effects of Fiscal Policy International Economic Review B 3
2023 Public Pension Reforms and Retirement Decisions: Narrative Evidence and Aggregate Implications American Economic Journal: Economic Policy A 2
2021 State dependence of monetary policy across business, credit and interest rate cycles European Economic Review B 3
2021 Homeownership and Housing Transitions: Explaining the Demographic Composition International Economic Review B 2
2019 Household Debt Overhang and Transmission of Monetary Policy Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking B 2
2018 Debt and stabilization policy: Evidence from a Euro Area FAVAR Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control B 3
2018 Government Spending Multipliers in Good Times and in Bad: Evidence from US Historical Data Journal of Political Economy S 2
2018 Propagation Mechanisms for Government Spending Shocks: A Bayesian Comparison Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking B 2
2017 Addressing household indebtedness: Monetary, fiscal or macroprudential policy? European Economic Review B 2
2016 Housing and Tax Policy Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking B 2
2014 On Fiscal Multipliers: Estimates from a Medium Scale Dsge Model International Economic Review B 1
2013 Are Government Spending Multipliers Greater during Periods of Slack? Evidence from Twentieth-Century Historical Data American Economic Review S 3
2013 Who benefits from increased government spending? A state-level analysis Regional Science and Urban Economics B 2
2011 What Is the Importance of Monetary and Fiscal Shocks in Explaining U.S. Macroeconomic Fluctuations? Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking B 2