Skip to main content

Dallas Fed recent additions

A comprehensive list of recently added postings on Dallasfed.org.
  • Texas–Mexico Energy Trade: Local and Global Impacts

    Texas has become a global energy powerhouse, with surging oil, natural gas, and petrochemical exports reshaping international trade relationships. As LNG terminals expand and cross-border energy flows accelerate, securing this vital supply chain presents new challenges. This conference will examine the opportunities and vulnerabilities in Texas's rapidly evolving energy trade landscape.

  • Texas Employment Forecast, April 17

    The Texas Employment Forecast indicates jobs will increase 1.4 percent in 2026, with an 80 percent confidence band of 0.7 to 2.1 percent.

  • Implications of the Iran war for U.S. inflation

    Recent research quantifies the impact of 2026 Iran war on U.S. inflation and household inflation expectations under a range of scenarios. Under a plausible scenario, 2026 fourth-quarter-over-fourth quarter headline personal consumption expenditures inflation would increase by 0.6 percentage points.

  • The Power to Discriminate

    Economic theory has long linked employer power to discrimination, but theory and empirical applications have seldom considered which form of power matters. This paper distinguishes between labor market and product market power and designs a study to isolate the role each plays in allowing discrimination to persist.

  • Weekly Economic Index

    The WEI is currently 2.80 percent, scaled to four-quarter GDP growth, for the week ended April 11 and 2.69 percent for April 4.

  • Skewness warrants caution as Trimmed Mean PCE inflation eases

    Divergence of core and trimmed mean inflation readings prompt reassessment of which one is the best indicator of medium-term trend.

  • Eleventh District Beige Book

    Economic activity in the Eleventh District rose slightly over the reporting period. Growth in manufacturing output moderated to a below-average pace, while activity in the service sector was nearly flat.

  • Texas homeowners pay high insurance costs, face rising premiums

    Home insurance premiums have risen dramatically in the postpandemic years, with the median Texas homeowner paying 60 percent more for home insurance in 2024 compared with 2019, American Community Survey data show.

  • Breaking Ground on Real Estate’s ‘New Normal’

    This conference looks at the new challenges of shifting macroeconomic realities, including trade and immigration, the AI boom and residential affordability. Industry analysts, economists and market experts will share their insights regarding the latest trends affecting residential and commercial real estate.

  • If You Build It, They May Not Come: Willingness to Participate in Managed EV Charging

    This paper tests managed charging with an experiment including all electric vehicles within a California utility.