Saturday, June 27, 2026
On cross-country:
Working papers and conferences:
On Australia and New Zealand:
On other countries:
On cross-country:
Working papers and conferences:
On Australia and New Zealand:
Posted by at 5:00 AM
Labels: Global Housing Watch
Friday, June 26, 2026
On prices, rent, and mortgage:
On sales, permits, starts, and supply:
On other developments:
On prices, rent, and mortgage:
On sales,
Posted by at 5:00 AM
Labels: Global Housing Watch
Saturday, June 20, 2026
On cross-country:
On China:
On other countries:
On cross-country:
On China:
On other countries:
Posted by at 5:00 AM
Labels: Global Housing Watch
Friday, June 19, 2026
On prices, rent, and mortgage:
On sales, permits, starts, and supply:
On other developments:
On prices, rent, and mortgage:
Posted by at 5:00 AM
Labels: Global Housing Watch
Monday, June 15, 2026
From a paper by Andre Harrison & Jeremy Viele:
“We use a structural vector autoregressive (SVAR) model to study the effects of oil market shocks on US labor productivity and employment hours, where identification occurs through a combination of short- and long-run exclusion restrictions. The results show that labor productivity is responsive to all sides of the oil market, with employment hours responding only to demand-side forces. Further, oil market shocks explain roughly 25% of the long-run variation in both variables. Among oil market shocks, oil-specific demand shocks contribute to most of the historical fluctuations in labor productivity, while aggregate demand shocks matter most for fluctuations in employment hours.”
From a paper by Andre Harrison & Jeremy Viele:
“We use a structural vector autoregressive (SVAR) model to study the effects of oil market shocks on US labor productivity and employment hours, where identification occurs through a combination of short- and long-run exclusion restrictions. The results show that labor productivity is responsive to all sides of the oil market, with employment hours responding only to demand-side forces. Further, oil market shocks explain roughly 25% of the long-run variation in both variables.
Posted by at 10:40 AM
Labels: Energy & Climate Change
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