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August 25, 2010

More thoughts on what to expect from the Fed

There is disagreement within the FOMC. How will it be resolved?

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Posted by James Hamilton at 03:49 PM permalink | Comments (21) | digg this | reddit

August 24, 2010

Kevin "Dow 36,000" Hassett* Speaks on "Keynesian Economics"

From Bloomberg:

The biggest Keynesian stimulus in U.S. history was a bust.

Incredibly, some Keynesians who supported Barack Obama's $862 billion stimulus now claim it fell short of their goals not because the idea was flawed, but because the spending package was too small.

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Posted by Menzie Chinn at 06:05 PM permalink | Comments (63) | digg this | reddit

August 22, 2010

Long-term perspective on the stock market

Nobody can tell you for sure what's going to happen next in the stock market. But thanks to the nice data set collected and maintained by Yale Professor Robert Shiller we can speak with authority about what it's been doing for the last 140 years.

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Posted by James Hamilton at 01:00 PM permalink | Comments (40) | digg this | reddit

August 19, 2010

The June Trade Release: A Clash of Narratives

The recent trade release for June sparked some consternation, as it indicated 2009Q2 2010Q2 growth, conditional on data already released, would be lower. But there was also some unhappiness as it was taken by some to mark the return of the spendthrift consumer.[0] Yet, everywhere I see discussion of how consumption is lackluster, because households are deleveraging and beset by uncertainty. [1] These two narratives clash. Which one is right?

Continue reading "The June Trade Release: A Clash of Narratives"

Posted by Menzie Chinn at 01:51 AM permalink | Comments (20) | digg this | reddit

August 18, 2010

Will the Fed do more?

If conditions deteriorate further, I believe the answer is yes.

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Posted by James Hamilton at 07:54 AM permalink | Comments (32) | digg this | reddit

August 16, 2010

Financing U.S. Debt

Is There Enough Money in the World -- and At What Cost?

From the abstract of a paper coauthored with John Kitchen:

This paper examines the potential role for foreign official holdings of U.S. Treasury securities and the associated implications for Treasury security interest rates, international portfolio allocations, net international income flows, and the U.S. net international debt position, using a baseline outlook of current and projected U.S. budget deficits and growing debt. ...

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Posted by Menzie Chinn at 02:01 PM permalink | Comments (25) | digg this | reddit

August 14, 2010

Escape from arbitrage: the movie

Two of my favorite economists, Bilkent University Professor Refet Gurkaynak and Johns Hopkins University Professor Jonathan Wright, have a nice new paper in which they survey macroeconomic theories of the term structure of interest rates. As an unusual digital supplement to their paper, they put together a movie in which you can watch the arbitrage glue that normally holds markets together start to fail as financial markets literally fell apart at the end of 2008.

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Posted by James Hamilton at 11:23 AM permalink | Comments (10) | digg this | reddit

August 13, 2010

Chinn-Ito Capital Account Index up to 2008

The Chinn-Ito de jure capital account index (previously discussed here and here) is now available, up to 2008. The data and accompanying documentation is all available here.

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Posted by Menzie Chinn at 05:36 PM permalink | Comments (4) | digg this | reddit

August 12, 2010

Persistent Large Output Gaps, Disinflation and Deflation

Or, what if the Accelerationist hypothesis doesn't hold. I'm sure this question will drive some apoplectic -- but I think it a reasonable question. First, let's look at the empirical evidence on what happens to inflation in the wake of persistent large output gaps. Fortuitously, Andre Meier has just written on this subject, in Still Minding the Gap:

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Posted by Menzie Chinn at 07:32 AM permalink | Comments (17) | digg this | reddit

August 11, 2010

Ever so slightly less contractionary

What is the significance of yesterday's statement from the FOMC?

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Posted by James Hamilton at 08:37 AM permalink | Comments (35) | digg this | reddit

August 09, 2010

From Disinflation to Deflation?

It's a schizophrenic world. On one side, there are lots of people worried about hyperinflation [0], despite forward looking indicators of inflation signalling quiescence [1] and actual price indicators going downward.

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Posted by Menzie Chinn at 04:43 PM permalink | Comments (24) | digg this | reddit

"Future Recession Risks"

That's the title of a new FRBSF Economic Letter. From Future Recession Risks, by Travis Berge and Oscar Jorda:

An unstable economic environment has rekindled talk of a double-dip recession. The Conference Board's Leading Economic Index provides data for predicting the probability of a recession but is limited by the weight assigned to its indicators and the varying efficacy of those indicators over different time horizons. Statistical experiments with LEI data can mitigate these limitations and suggest that a recessionary relapse is a significant possibility sometime in the next two years.

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Posted by Menzie Chinn at 10:38 AM permalink | Comments (9) | digg this | reddit

August 08, 2010

Current economic conditions

Last week's new economics data were a mixed bag. But on balance I'd have to say I'm more discouraged than when the week began.

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Posted by James Hamilton at 06:46 AM permalink | Comments (13) | digg this | reddit

August 07, 2010

Vast Ice 'Island' Breaks Free of Greenland Glacier

From NYT, a quote of researcher Jason Box:

Petermann [glacier] is a sleeping giant that is slowly awakening. Removing flow resistance leads to flow acceleration... The coincidence of this area loss and a 30 square kilometer loss in 2008 with abnormal warmth this year, the setting of increasing sea surface temperatures and sea ice decline are all part of a climate warming pattern.

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Posted by Menzie Chinn at 11:40 PM permalink | Comments (62) | digg this | reddit

August 06, 2010

A Sputtering Economy?

The employment situation July release indicated a decrease in overall payroll employment. Does this outcome indicate a sputtering* economy

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Posted by Menzie Chinn at 08:11 AM permalink | Comments (37) | digg this | reddit

August 05, 2010

Contagion, Re-examined

For a while, contagion had dropped off the (research) map. But it's now back (thanks to Greece et al!), in both research and policy arenas. A new symposium published in Pacific Economic Review covers the topic.

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Posted by Menzie Chinn at 04:34 PM permalink | Comments (6) | digg this | reddit

August 04, 2010

Lessons from the Gulf Spill: Do's and Don'ts

We're pleased to feature another post from Steven Kopits of Douglas-Westwood, this time on lessons to be learned from the BP oil disaster.

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Posted by James Hamilton at 08:33 AM permalink | Comments (24) | digg this | reddit

August 03, 2010

Macro Advisers on Expiration of EGTRRA/JGTRRA

From Macroeconomic Advisers "The impact of sunset of tax cuts on GDP, employment, inflation & interest rates", released today:

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Posted by Menzie Chinn at 08:00 AM permalink | Comments (18) | digg this | reddit

August 02, 2010

Let Bush Be Bush...on Taxes

Recall the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts were written to expire, for the most part, in FY2011. I wrote in February that one way to start fixing the Nation's finances is to let the EGTRRA and JGTRRA expire as they were originally designed to. Via EconomistMom comes Bill Gale's additional reasons why we should, despite the lackluster recovery [0] (more on that below).

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Posted by Menzie Chinn at 11:30 AM permalink | Comments (20) | digg this | reddit

August 01, 2010

Options for monetary stimulus

The latest economic data have surely warranted a downward revision in the Federal Reserve's assessment of near-term economic performance. It therefore might be a good time to review the steps the Fed could take if it wishes to provide further economic stimulus.

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Posted by James Hamilton at 06:51 AM permalink | Comments (42) | digg this | reddit

July 31, 2010

The 10Q2 Advance GDP Release: Cautionary Notes from Revisions

The 2010Q2 advance GDP release has been covered by Jim, as well as others. [RTE/Izzo] [CEA] [FreeExchange/RA] [CR] [MA] The release was accompanied by an annual revision of data extending back to data for 2007Q1. This revision alters our understanding (or lack of understanding in the cases of certain people) of the evolution of this recession. Here are the points I gleaned.

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Posted by Menzie Chinn at 08:55 AM permalink | Comments (16) | digg this | reddit

July 30, 2010

About that recovery you ordered

"We have met the enemy and he is us," Pogo used to say. Well, we've also now met the recovery, and he is ugly.

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Posted by James Hamilton at 09:18 AM permalink | Comments (21) | digg this | reddit

July 29, 2010

NOAA: Past Decade Warmest on Record

...According to Scientists in 48 Countries. Earth has been growing warmer for more than fifty years.

global-jan-dec-july10.gif
Figure 1: Source: NOAA.

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Posted by Menzie Chinn at 12:01 AM permalink | Comments (89) | digg this | reddit

July 28, 2010

Conference: China in the Global Economy

Recently, I had the pleasure of participating in a CES-ifo workshop on "The Evolving Role of China in the Global Economy," co-organized by Yin-Wong Cheung and Jakob de Haan. The conference agenda is here. The paper topics spanned issues ranging from monetary independence and integration into global financial markets, SOE access to credit and SOE efficiency, Chinese saving/consumption behavior, econometric models of China-global interactions, and the determinants of Chinese FDI in the rest-of-the-world.

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Posted by Menzie Chinn at 04:43 PM permalink | Comments (2) | digg this | reddit