Skip to content

Econbrowser

Analysis of current economic conditions and policy

The challenge of depletion

Where’s that large, unprecedented buildup of oil supply when you really need it?

Continue reading →

This entry was posted on November 19, 2007 by James_Hamilton.

Tales from the Tails of the WSJ Forecast

The interesting aspects of the survey of forecasts conducted by the Wall Street Journal (data here) are not in the means (or medians), but in the tails.

Continue reading →

This entry was posted on November 17, 2007 by Menzie Chinn.

Trusting the birth/death model

Ray Stone of Stone & McCarthy Research Associates has some interesting observations on the quality of the payroll employment numbers released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Continue reading →

This entry was posted on November 16, 2007 by James_Hamilton.

Assessing CBO Projections

CBO releases CBO’s Economic Forecasting Record: 2007 Update [pdf].

Continue reading →

This entry was posted on November 16, 2007 by Menzie Chinn.

Musings on the Trade Release and Consumption Theory

Last week’s trade release induced some wide-ranging thoughts, that spurred more questions than answers. In an experimental post, I’ll pose some questions that I hope readers will help me answer.

Continue reading →

This entry was posted on November 15, 2007 by Menzie Chinn.

New research on the causes of the housing boom and bust

What are the respective contributions of national and local factors to recent changes in house prices?

Continue reading →

This entry was posted on November 13, 2007 by James_Hamilton.

The Credit Crunch Continues, and the Conundrum Is History

The credit crunch seems to be worsening, rather than lessening, and the conundrum seems to have disappeared.

Continue reading →

This entry was posted on November 12, 2007 by Menzie Chinn.

Oil, gold, the dollar, and inflation

Do the ongoing surge in gold and oil prices and slide in the dollar signal a resurgence of inflation?

Continue reading →

This entry was posted on November 11, 2007 by James_Hamilton.

The Expansion Compared: An Update

Just to put the 2007Q3 3.9% SAAR increase in GDP in perspective, here is how output stacks up during this expansion as compared to the last.

Continue reading →

This entry was posted on November 10, 2007 by Menzie Chinn.

Modeling Exchange Rates: What Does Current Academic Thinking Have to Say about the Dollar’s Future?

As the dollar continues its decline, I think it’s useful to step away from the high frequency analysis [1],[2], to consider what the currents in academic thinking on the enterprise of predicting exchange rates are.

Continue reading →

This entry was posted on November 8, 2007 by Menzie Chinn.

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Authors

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

Folow us on Twitter

  • James Hamilton
  • Menzie Chinn

Recent Posts

  • ADP Private NFP and Implied BLS NFP
  • Why the Administration Is Happy Not to See the October Employment Numbers
  • Betting on Noise? Supreme Court and IEEPA Tariffs
  • Labor Market Indicators amidst the Shutdown
  • Guest Contribution: “Abundance”

Categories

Archives

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

Proudly powered by WordPress