Tariff Update: Incorporating Recent Decisions and Deals
An
Our latest Tariff Update is out! What's π?
βοΈ AETR incorporating trade deals with UK and China
βοΈ Sectoral "Impact Factor" (IF)
IF measures how tariffs affect the cost of production per sector considering input-output network.
Data can be downloaded!
Read More: www.richmondfed.org/publications...
06.06.2025 15:09 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
This is adorable.
26.05.2025 01:44 β π 629 π 72 π¬ 38 π 58
About the length of time it takes to publish a paper in macro π
16.05.2025 12:07 β π 3 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
π― trying to fight chatGPT in this day and age for education is like trying to ban Wikipedia years ago.
Itβs just man throwing sticks at elephants
14.05.2025 12:03 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
Congrats!!! Love your work!!! π€©π€©
29.04.2025 11:50 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
These are the industries facing the largest tariffs (left) and the top 10 global product categories with the steepest US import booking declines for the week ending March 31, 2025 (right)
16.04.2025 12:01 β π 1 π 1 π¬ 0 π 0
Tariff Update: Incorporating the April 9 Announcements
The recent tariff announcement implies that the average effective tariff rate would rise further compared to our previous analysis.
Our new Tariff Update incorporating April 9 announcements is out!
Data underlying the figures (including tariffs by country, industry and county!) available to download at the bottom of the article π€©
PS: just please remember to cite us if you use the data
www.richmondfed.org/publications...
15.04.2025 20:53 β π 3 π 0 π¬ 2 π 0
Back in 2015 I created the βEcon Discussion Boardβ were people could post short comments to a paper.
I set it up, split it by fields, asked for moderators.
Nobody used it. π
Network coordination is key for these initiatives to work. I hope Econometrica will be the βsunspotβ this time.
27.03.2025 13:10 β π 2 π 1 π¬ 0 π 0
"You will never need to use price elasticity in real life."
Tariff: π
21.03.2025 13:13 β π 58 π 3 π¬ 0 π 2
Itβs one of those daysβ¦
04.12.2024 00:03 β π 13 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
Economics. Personal views.
Cohost of The Odd Lots Podcast
Singer and guitarist in Light Sweet Crude
Personal Account. Director of Economics, The Budget Lab at Yale University. Former Chief Economist, White House Council of Economic Advisers.
a cohost of ππ° and author of The Bond King
mchilds at npr dot org
Signal @marychilds01
Workforce Economist in Residence at Guild; Senior Fellow at the Burning Glass Institute. I tweet a lot about labor markets, macro, and (sorry) music! Tweets represent my own views.
Econ prof University of Zurich.
Faculty affiliate at JPAL, CEPR, CESifo.
Board member IIPF, Helvetas, GAIN.
#EconSky
Macrodata Refinement
Personal account | Views are my own
The Peterson Institute for International Economics is a nonpartisan, independent research institution devoted to studying international economic policy.
Explore our research: piie.com
Writing a data-driven newsletter about economics @ apricitas.io
Nuance? In this Economy
Full Employment Stan, Brazilian Coffee Tariff Victim |
Bronx boy. Cubs fan. Dad, husband, writer, podcaster and cable news host.
The Sirensβ Call: How Attention Became the Worldβs Most Endangered Resource out now.
https://sirenscallbook.com/
Behavioral Economist, sports fan
Executive Board of the European Central Bank, University of Bonn (on leave) #NieWiederIstJetzt
Institute Professor, MIT Economics. Co-Director of @mitshapingwork.bsky.social. Author of Why Nations Fail, The Narrow Corridor, and Power & Progress.
Assistant professor of economics @ UVA
basilhalperin.com
Chicago diehard. President & CEO of the Chicago Fed, econ prof Chicago Booth School, former Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers.
I do not speak for the Fed or others on the FOMC
Prof cemfi. Former Editor Restud. Macro, food, coffee and cocktails. ππ©πͺπΈπͺπΊπΈ
The FTβs team of reporters, statisticians, illustrators, cartographers, designers, and developers work with colleagues across our newsrooms, using graphics and data to find, investigate and explain stories.
https://www.ft.com/visual-and-data-journalism