Why hasn’t inflation caught up with a monetary-induced boom in China?
Counterfactuals and the Stimulus, Again
And some lessons from the 1930’s for the 2000’s
John Taylor returns to the topic of how much impact the stimulus package has had on output. The heart of the argument is summarized by his extension of a graph presented in the NYT (and reproduced in this post).
Term deposit facility
On Monday the Federal Reserve proposed a new term deposit facility that would allow the Fed to borrow directly from private institutions. Here I offer some thoughts on how this fits into the Fed’s long-term plans and what its implications for the rest of us might be.
How Important Is Structural Unemployment in the Current Recession/Recovery?
Joseph Lawler at the Spectator distills the Austrian perspective on the sources of current unemployment.
The Prospects for Global Imbalances: A View from the IMF
Following up on recent posts ([1], [2], [3], [4], [5] [6]) Here’s another take on the prospects for resolving global imbalances, from Olivier Blanchard and Gian Maria Milesi Ferretti, “Global Imbalances: In Midstream?” Staff Position Note 09/29 (Dec. 22, 2009):
IV.B. Lower Global Imbalances in the Future
What will happen in the future depends on how long the factors we just listed will be in play [oil price decline, asset price busts, increase in home bias, the hit to durable consumption and investment goods demand].
Below is reproduced the IMF World Economic Outlook‘s October 2009 forecast for current account balances.
Lost decade for stocks
Why were the aughts so nasty for stocks?
Levels versus Growth Rates and the Impact of ARRA
Since there is often confusion in popular discussions of the net effect of the stimulus on GDP, I thought it would be useful to present Deutsche Bank’s views on the impact on both the level and growth rates of GDP. (Here we are talking about seasonally adjusted at annual rates [SAAR] growth rates and levels; cautionary notes here: [1], [2].)
Podcast on the federal debt
EconTalk hosts a podcast of a conversation I had with
George Mason Professor Russ Roberts on deficits and the debt. At the end we also get to a discussion of oil markets. You can participate in the discussion with your own comments either here or over at EconTalk.
A Crisis Reading List
What went wrong and how can we fix it?
That’s the title of an article I wrote for the UCSD Economics Department’s Economics in Action, which I reproduce below.