Saturday, June 7, 2025
On cross-country:
Working papers and conferences:
On China:
On Australia and New Zealand:
On other countries:
On cross-country:
Working papers and conferences:
Posted by 5:00 AM
atLabels: Global Housing Watch
Friday, June 6, 2025
From a paper by Bing Lu, Xu Yang, Xinding Yu:
“Using data from Chinese industrial firms between 2000 and 2013, we explore the varied impact of minimum wage increases on the exit behavior and export performance of foreign-owned firms, focusing on three primary motivations: labor costs, market size, and industrial linkages. The results show that foreign-owned firms driven by labor costs are more likely to exit following a minimum wage hike, while those motivated by market size and industrial linkages are less likely to be affected. We also observe similar patterns in firm exports: rising minimum wages generally reduce foreign-owned firms’ exports, with the impact being more pronounced for firms with lower domestic market shares and weaker industrial linkages. This paper highlights that deep integration of foreign-owned firms into the domestic market and industrial chain can help mitigate the exit risks associated with rising labor costs.”
From a paper by Bing Lu, Xu Yang, Xinding Yu:
“Using data from Chinese industrial firms between 2000 and 2013, we explore the varied impact of minimum wage increases on the exit behavior and export performance of foreign-owned firms, focusing on three primary motivations: labor costs, market size, and industrial linkages. The results show that foreign-owned firms driven by labor costs are more likely to exit following a minimum wage hike,
Posted by 12:00 PM
atLabels: Inclusive Growth
On prices, rent, and mortgage:
On sales, permits, starts, and supply:
On other developments:
On prices, rent, and mortgage:
Posted by 5:00 AM
atLabels: Global Housing Watch
Tuesday, June 3, 2025
From a paper by Aariya Sen, and Rudra Sensarma:
“Recent studies have examined the impact of monetary policy on economic inequality, but have focused on advanced economies and wealth inequality. We analyse the impact of monetary policy on income and consumption inequality estimated from a household level dataset in India. We apply Sign-Restricted VAR and Local Projection models to monthly data for 2014–2023. We show that contractionary monetary policy worsens consumption inequality while reducing income inequality. We also find that while restrictive monetary policy reduces capital income inequality and wage income inequality it widens the gap between capital and wage income earners. Moreover, monetary policy exhibits asymmetric effects, suggesting trade-offs for the central bank.”
From a paper by Aariya Sen, and Rudra Sensarma:
“Recent studies have examined the impact of monetary policy on economic inequality, but have focused on advanced economies and wealth inequality. We analyse the impact of monetary policy on income and consumption inequality estimated from a household level dataset in India. We apply Sign-Restricted VAR and Local Projection models to monthly data for 2014–2023. We show that contractionary monetary policy worsens consumption inequality while reducing income inequality.
Posted by 6:58 AM
atLabels: Inclusive Growth
From Humanity on Trial:
“As discussed on the environmental integration page, cognitive environmental integration has two dimensions: the internal dimension refers to the existence or creation of an overarching cognitive framework that can provide guidance on what environmental processes, limits, principles or imperatives need to be respected to preserve the environmental systems on which life, including human life, depends; the external dimension refers to the integration of those ‘parameters’ as core elements into the cognitive frameworks (ideologies; theories, management frameworks and other) that guide human behaviour, actions and practices in what are usually regarded non-environmental areas, such as economic thinking, ideas, theories or models guiding the development of energy systems, technology, agriculture, transport, the production and consumption of goods and services, the design and construction of buildings and the built-up environment, and any other areas that have (potentially) a significant impact on the environment.
It may surprise those who think that the creation and adoption of such an overarching cognitive environmental framework at the global level is a utopian idea that, in practice, this is an area of environmental integration in which global efforts have been relatively successful. I am referring here, in particular, to the rise of the notion of sustainable development and the extent to which it has been adopted by governments worldwide and international organisations.”
Continue reading here.
From Humanity on Trial:
“As discussed on the environmental integration page, cognitive environmental integration has two dimensions: the internal dimension refers to the existence or creation of an overarching cognitive framework that can provide guidance on what environmental processes, limits, principles or imperatives need to be respected to preserve the environmental systems on which life, including human life, depends; the external dimension refers to the integration of those ‘parameters’ as
Posted by 6:57 AM
atLabels: Energy & Climate Change
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