And he'll probably hold the Senate.
And he'll probably hold the Senate.
Great epistemic practice here: www.nytimes.com/2025/12/18/u...
A number of people have asked me about this and I fully agree with Omari Sharif (@fcastofthemonth) who is the absolute dean of CPI analysis.
Actual rents appear to have slowed in Oct/Nov, but not unrealistically so - about the same rate they hit in Sept.
But OER (more on that to follow) plunged.
Turnout was 19%.
5 weeks ago, I wrote about the shutdown's impact on the labor market and how big it would be. A big reason why the impact has been small so far: few irreversible events.
But we're starting to cross some potentially more serious and economically destructive milestones...
The places where batteries are being deployed in volume have some of the best inherent solar resource. Maybe the price falls by some much that it works in the northeast or midwest, but we're pretty far from that.
Batteries only pencil out if they cycle daily - a lithium ion battery is not going to work to store power seasonally or for a string of cloudy days.
I really don't think this is the right takeaway. Solar is great but electricity that is available only at certain times and only under certain conditions is not a great substitute for dispatchable power. It would benefit clean energy advocates to give more thought to how to produce clean firm power.
The podcast version of our BPEA paper on βWho bears the burden of climate inaction?β (thread below, with @cwolfram.bsky.social and @knittelmit.bsky.social) just dropped .
www.brookings.edu/articles/how...
π§΅ (1/7) With @knittelmit.bsky.social and @cwolfram.bsky.social, happy to announce our new paper on βWho Bears the Burden of Climate Inaction?β, just posted for BPEA @brookings.edu.
We find large climate cost impacts that vary by both geography and income.
www.brookings.edu/articles/who...
Thanks to @kclausing.bsky.social for the great thread on our BPEA paper with @knittelmit.bsky.social!
Bottom line: US households experience climate change primarily through wildfires and storms more than heat.
8/8 Hereβs the link to the paper β comments welcome! www.minneapolisfed.org/research/qua...
7/8: In future work, we think understanding the distributional effects of tariffs will be important. The heterogenous agent trade models pioneered by Mike are a good laboratory for this.
6/8: How does what we do differ from the explosion of other work on tariffs? Typical trade models are static and do not focus on either interest rate dynamics or investment. Other work assumes a small open economy (constant world interest rate) and/or excludes investment.
5/8: Our paper discusses some other mechanisms that are not present in our model that may attenuate or reverse our conclusion. For example, to the extent that tariffs lead to reindustrialization, that mechanism could work in the other direction.
4/8: Our quantitative simulations suggest that this effect is sizable: on the order of 25-50 basis points for a 15% tariff:
3/8: We find that both unilateral tariffs and a trade war lower the natural rate of interest in the short run. Tariffs and trade wars lower investment by raising the cost of investment goods. This lower demand for assets lowers interest rates and the return on capital.
2/8: We examine the effects of a unilateral tariffs in a global dynamic heterogenous agent trade model. Weβre particularly focused on what happens to the natural rate of interest β the neutral interest rate that a central bank wants to target to keep output at potential.
1/8: Quick thread on a new short paper with Mike Waugh in the latest edition of the Minneapolis Fed Quarterly Review:
Love the DS9 reference!
Imho too much discussion on here about whether the labor market is weak or not given slowdown in labor supply. Too little discussion of how to proceed with downside risks to both sides of the mandate.
The implication is that the rest of the Board is accepting her firing, and that she has been removed. Not good. The better strategy would be to continue work as normal and make Trump get an order removing her.
TFW no one talked to a macroeconomists at any point from working paper to publication: www.washingtonpost.com/climate-envi...
All the regional presidents are up for reappointment in February 2026 and, even if reappointed, could be removed at any time by the Board of Governors.
What happened to the ~100 billion in rail funding in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law in 2021? What got built?
Really, I mean if it was 52-48, they would have passed something materially similar.
This is exactly right. Anyone voting for the spending bill is voting for higher energy bills and blackouts.
A sad capitulation from the Timberpuppies. Sigh.
Federal Reserve to slash staff by 10% over several years
https://www.ft.com/content/927ba69e-3037-4e0f-b9a6-1eeaac8b03b7
Initial claims come in slightly above prior non-recessionary years, both in headcount (1st) & share-of-emp (2nd) terms. Initial claims are ~19K above where they were same week in 2019. Not a catastrophe but it's notable. Continuing claims slightly above recent years too (3rd).