Ivan Shchapov
I am a Ph.D. Candidate in Economics at Institut Polytechnique de Paris (CREST) and a Stipendiary Lecturer at École Polytechnique.
My research focuses on monetary economics, fiscal policy, financial stability, and international macroeconomics.
I will be on the Academic Job Market in November 2025.
Job market paper
Monetary Tightening, Quantitative Easing, and Financial Stability
Ivan Shchapov
Ivan Shchapov
This paper analyses the implications of central bank balance sheet policies on financial stability in a framework with banks facing occasionally-binding leverage constraints and endogenous disruptions in financial intermediation. Whilst central bank balance sheet expansions are effective in stabilising the economy in a financial stress episode, they increase the frequency of such episodes and their duration. Balance sheet expansions induce financial intermediaries to take on more risk in normal times and slow their recapitalisation during a stress episode. In a tightening cycle, stabilisation properties of balance sheet policies are maintained but come at a significant cost to price stability.
Publications
Productivity over the Life-Cycle and its Effects on the Interest Rate
Momo Komatsu, David Murakami, and Ivan Shchapov
Japanese Economic Review
Momo Komatsu, David Murakami, and Ivan Shchapov
Japanese Economic Review
Japan has faced rapid ageing, persistently low interest rates, sluggish growth, and deflation for decades. Concurrently, there has been a gradual convergence in productivity between young and elderly workers. This paper aims to explore the relationship between productivity, demographic shifts, and interest rates in Japan during the post-bubble era, using an overlapping generations two-agent New Keynesian (OTANK) DSGE model. The narrowing productivity gap between younger and older cohorts puts upward pressure on interest rates. Meanwhile, factors such as longer life expectancy and negative population growth rates exert downward pressure on interest rates. The latter effect dominates. A central bank that does not account for this when setting monetary policy may induce deflationary pressure in the economy. Important policy implications emerge: Enhancing worker productivity across workers’ entire life-cycle and bridging the productivity gap between younger and older workers can help offset the decline in interest rates, and monetary policy ought to account for shifting demographics.
Working Papers
It is Taxing to be Coherent
David Murakami, Ivan Shchapov, and Yifan Zhang
Revision requested at Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control
David Murakami, Ivan Shchapov, and Yifan Zhang
Revision requested at Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control
The presence of an occasionally binding constraint due to the effective lower bound (ELB) in New Keynesian models generally gives rise to multiple equilibria under active monetary policy. To restore uniqueness in the model with an active Taylor rule, we consider appropriate simple fiscal policy instruments. Without relaxing the assumptions of Ricardian equivalence, full information, and rational expectations, we show that appropriate fiscal targeting rules ensure that New Keynesian models subject to the ELB possess a unique solution.
CBDCs, Financial Inclusion, and Optimal Monetary Policy
David Murakami, Ivan Shchapov, Ganesh Viswanath-Natraj
Revision requested at Macroeconomic Dynamics
David Murakami, Ivan Shchapov, Ganesh Viswanath-Natraj
Revision requested at Macroeconomic Dynamics
This paper explores the interaction between monetary policy and financial inclusion with the introduction of a central bank digital currency (CBDC). Using a New-Keynesian two-agent framework, we show that CBDCs can enhance welfare for unbanked households by providing an interest-bearing savings tool that facilitates consumption smoothing in response to monetary policy shocks. However, higher CBDC rates, while beneficial to unbanked households, reduce welfare for banked households due to tax redistribution effects. A Ramsey optimal policy exercise demonstrates that a social planner would typically set the CBDC rate to maintain a constant spread relative to the policy rate to maximise welfare. These findings emphasise the importance of tailoring CBDC design to an economy’s level of financial inclusion.
Works in Progress
Unconventional Policy in a Low Interest Rate Environment
Guido Ascari, David Murakami, Ivan Shchapov, and Francesco Zanetti
Guido Ascari, David Murakami, Ivan Shchapov, and Francesco Zanetti
Global Determinacy According to HANK
David Murakami, Ivan Shchapov, and Yifan Zhang
David Murakami, Ivan Shchapov, and Yifan Zhang
Commodity Currency Crashes, Risk Premia, and Monetary Policy
Xuanheng Huang, David Murakami, Ivan Shchapov, Ganesh Viswanath-Natraj, and Yifang Zhang
Xuanheng Huang, David Murakami, Ivan Shchapov, Ganesh Viswanath-Natraj, and Yifang Zhang
European Monetary Policy Shocks and Consumer Spending. Evidence from France
Martina Bianchi, David Bounie, and Ivan Shchapov
Martina Bianchi, David Bounie, and Ivan Shchapov