Friday, December 31, 2021
In a column for the public policy think tank, American Enterprise Institute, the top ten inbound and top ten outbound US states for the year 2021 have been compared using new data on net domestic migration data from the US Census Bureau.
Click here to read the full report.
In a column for the public policy think tank, American Enterprise Institute, the top ten inbound and top ten outbound US states for the year 2021 have been compared using new data on net domestic migration data from the US Census Bureau.
Source: American Enterprise Institute
Source: American Enterprise Institute
Click here to read the full report.
Posted by 1:08 PM
atLabels: Inclusive Growth
Thursday, December 30, 2021
Laurence M. Ball of the Johns Hopkins University, and Daniel Leigh, Prachi Mishra, and Antonio Spilimbergo of the International Monetary Fund write about the core inflation rate in the US in a paper for the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER).
Abstract:
“Large price changes in industries affected by the COVID-19 pandemic have caused erratic fluctuations in the U.S. headline inflation rate. This paper compares alternative approaches to filtering out the transitory effects of these industry price changes and measuring the underlying or core level of inflation over 2020-2021. The Federal Reserve’s preferred measure of core, the inflation rate excluding food and energy prices, has performed poorly: over most of 2020-21, it is almost as volatile as headline inflation. Measures of core that exclude a fixed set of additional industries, such as the Atlanta Fed’s sticky-price inflation rate, have been less volatile, but the least volatile have been measures that filter out large price changes in any industry, such as the Cleveland Fed’s median inflation rate and the Dallas Fed’s trimmed mean inflation rate. These core measures have followed smooth paths, drifting down when the economy was weak in 2020 and then rising as the economy has rebounded.”
Click here to read the full paper.
Laurence M. Ball of the Johns Hopkins University, and Daniel Leigh, Prachi Mishra, and Antonio Spilimbergo of the International Monetary Fund write about the core inflation rate in the US in a paper for the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER).
Abstract:
“Large price changes in industries affected by the COVID-19 pandemic have caused erratic fluctuations in the U.S. headline inflation rate. This paper compares alternative approaches to filtering out the transitory effects of these industry price changes and measuring the underlying or core level of inflation over 2020-2021.
Posted by 9:41 AM
atLabels: Macro Demystified
Wednesday, December 29, 2021
In a paper for the National Bureau of Economic Research, authors Arpit Gupta of NYU Stern School of Business, and Anup Malani and Bartosz Woda of the University of Chicago Law School write about inequality in India during the COVID-19 pandemic. The abstract of the paper is as follows:
“We use a large, representative panel data set from India with monthly data on household finances to examine the incidence of economic harms during the COVID pandemic. We observe a sharp spike in poverty, peaking during India’s sharp but short lockdown. However, there was a striking decrease in income inequality outside the lockdown. There was a smaller decrease in consumption inequality, likely due to consumption smoothing. Evidence supports two mechanisms for the decline in income inequality: the capital income of top-quartile earners covaries more with aggregate income, and demand for labor fell more for higher quartiles.”
Click here to read the full paper.
In a paper for the National Bureau of Economic Research, authors Arpit Gupta of NYU Stern School of Business, and Anup Malani and Bartosz Woda of the University of Chicago Law School write about inequality in India during the COVID-19 pandemic. The abstract of the paper is as follows:
“We use a large, representative panel data set from India with monthly data on household finances to examine the incidence of economic harms during the COVID pandemic.
Posted by 9:41 AM
atLabels: Inclusive Growth
Tuesday, December 28, 2021
John H. Cochrane, Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution (Stanford University) writes about the inflationary impact of pent-up demand in the post-pandemic period in his blog, The Grumpy Economist. He writes:
“Milton Friedman once said that if you want inflation, you can just drop money from helicopters. That is basically what the US government has done. But this US inflation is ultimately fiscal, not monetary. People do not have an excess of money relative to bonds; rather, people have extra savings and extra apparent wealth to spend. Had the government borrowed the entire $5 trillion to write the same checks, we likely would have the same inflation.”
In the subsequent sections, he discusses reasons why the Covid-19 related fiscal stimulus produce inflation when previous stimulus efforts from 2008 to 2020 fizzled.
Click here to read the full blog.
John H. Cochrane, Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution (Stanford University) writes about the inflationary impact of pent-up demand in the post-pandemic period in his blog, The Grumpy Economist. He writes:
“Milton Friedman once said that if you want inflation, you can just drop money from helicopters. That is basically what the US government has done. But this US inflation is ultimately fiscal, not monetary. People do not have an excess of money relative to bonds;
Posted by 11:06 AM
atLabels: Macro Demystified
Monday, December 27, 2021
In a column for VoxEU CEPR, Majed Dodin and Sebastian Findeisen of the University of Manheim, Lukas Henkel of the European Central Bank, Dominik Sachs of the University of St. Gallen, and Paul Schüle of the University of Munich write about social mobility in Germany.
“According to the OECD, social mobility in Germany is lower than in most other developed economies, reigniting a debate on equality of opportunity and shortcomings of the education system. This column discusses how census data can be used to obtain high-quality mobility statistics for Germany. Using the Abitur educational qualification as a measure of opportunity, it suggests that relative mobility has remained constant for recent birth cohorts but points to substantial geographic variation in mobility measures across regions in the country.”
Click here to read the full blog.
In a column for VoxEU CEPR, Majed Dodin and Sebastian Findeisen of the University of Manheim, Lukas Henkel of the European Central Bank, Dominik Sachs of the University of St. Gallen, and Paul Schüle of the University of Munich write about social mobility in Germany.
“According to the OECD, social mobility in Germany is lower than in most other developed economies, reigniting a debate on equality of opportunity and shortcomings of the education system.
Posted by 6:17 AM
atLabels: Inclusive Growth
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