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Econbrowser

Analysis of current economic conditions and policy

Consumer Expectations Crash, 1 Year Ahead Inflation Expectations Soar as 5 Year Ahead Hits Record

5 year ahead inflation at 3.5%, highest since 1995M04. From Michigan Survey of Consumers:

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This entry was posted on February 21, 2025 by Menzie Chinn.

Bringing Prices Down: A Progress Report

We’re a month into Trump 2.0. We don’t have February’s prices yet, but since Trump was going to do everything “Day 1”, I thought it useful to take a look at various indices.

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This entry was posted on February 20, 2025 by Menzie Chinn.

What — If Anything — Do Re-inverting Term Spreads Mean?

Open question – we’re not quite there yet.

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This entry was posted on February 20, 2025 by Menzie Chinn.

No Recession until 2025Q4 (Assuming Reciprocal Tariffs w/Retaliation) [graph corrected!]

And CBO’s January  projection:

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This entry was posted on February 20, 2025 by Menzie Chinn.

NBC News: “USDA says it accidentally fired officials working on bird flu and is trying to rehire them”

From NBC News.

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This entry was posted on February 18, 2025 by Menzie Chinn.

EPU and Expected Inflation

From election day, five year inflation breakeven up 33 bps; EPU up 231. What could go wrong?

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This entry was posted on February 18, 2025 by Menzie Chinn.

Anthony Diercks, Daniel Soques and Jing Cynthia Wu: “Perfect Recession Indicators”

From the abstract to the paper:

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This entry was posted on February 18, 2025 by Menzie Chinn.

Policy Uncertainty in the US, Globally

as measured by Baker, Bloom and Davis’s EPU. I was in Europe, and conversations were in high gear about how things now seemed. And text mining confirms:

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This entry was posted on February 18, 2025 by Menzie Chinn.

AP: “Trump begins firings of FAA air traffic control staff just weeks after fatal DC plane crash”

Article here.

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This entry was posted on February 17, 2025 by Menzie Chinn.

The Russian Economy: How Many Contingent Liabilities?

It seems like a funny question to ask given Russian government debt to GDP isn’t that large. Craig Kennedy argues that taking into account forced bank lending means that (contingent) government liabilities are much larger than conventionally-defined public liabilities (report here). The summary:

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This entry was posted on February 15, 2025 by Menzie Chinn.

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James D. Hamilton is Professor of Economics at the University of California, San Diego

Menzie Chinn is Professor of Public Affairs and Economics at the University of Wisconsin, Madison

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Current Indicators

Econbrowser faces the data: (since Apr 30,2025)

Econbrowser recession indicator index: 11.7 (describes  2025:Q1)

The most recent U.S. recession began in 2020:Q1 and ended in 2020:Q2

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