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Global Institute Articles in Dallas Fed Economics

Articles from Dallas Fed Economics providing critical insights on trade, immigration, and other major international issues, along with in-depth analysis of monetary policy challenges affecting the U.S. economy and its deep financial and economic ties with Mexico.
  • Dallas Fed Economics

    Central bank swaps offer dollar crisis lifeline to non-U.S. banks

    Starting in late 2007, the Federal Reserve, in partnership with a few major foreign central banks, began offering central bank dollar liquidity swap lines as an important liquidity backstop.

  • Dallas Fed Economics

    Are trade deficits good or bad, and can tariffs reduce them?

    Typically, trade deficits are viewed through a lens of exports and imports, with the latter exceeding the former. While that is a useful exercise, it’s also helpful to examine deficits through a macroeconomic lens.

  • Dallas Fed Economics

    Bubble thought: What beliefs can reveal about housing market risks

    Survey-based forecast data on home price growth are a surer indicator of housing market exuberance than traditional valuation ratios, such as price-to-income or price-to-rent.

  • Dallas Fed Economics

    Middle East geopolitical risk modestly affects inflation and inflation expectations

    In Depth: While hostilities between Iran and Israel ended quickly in June 2025 without a major oil supply disruption, it is worthwhile to explore the impact on inflation and inflation expectations if this geopolitical event had turned out differently.

  • Dallas Fed Economics

    Texas firms open to AI as tariff work-around strategy

    Firms are adopting AI and automation to offset rising tariff costs and shrinking margins, aiming to boost productivity and reduce labor needs amid economic challenges.

  • Dallas Fed Economics

    Declining immigration weighs on GDP growth, with little impact on inflation

    In Depth: Unauthorized immigration surged sharply in 2021–24 but has since declined abruptly with negative implications for economic growth.

  • Dallas Fed Economics

    Advances in AI will boost productivity, living standards over time

    Artificial intelligence offers the potential to improve people’s living standards. Such advances can be approximated by changes in GDP per capita over time. Using that common measure, AI could enhance longstanding productivity gains or, alternatively, drastically alter the economy in relatively short order.

  • Dallas Fed Economics

    Will AI replace your job? Perhaps not in the next decade

    Recent rapid improvements in the capabilities of artificial intelligence have raised concerns about these technologies' impact on employment. The ultimate effects of AI on the workforce will depend on the extent to which AI augments (or complements) rather than automates (or substitutes for) workers' tasks. Will this new technology aid workers or replace them?

  • Dallas Fed Economics

    U.S. tariff outcomes dependent on trading partner responses

    In Depth: U.S. tariff policy has historically shifted among competing goals: providing revenue, protecting domestic markets and opening foreign markets to domestic producers. These goals are unlikely to be achieved simultaneously.

  • Dallas Fed Economics

    Texas economic outlook downbeat as uncertainty increases

    The Texas economy grew slightly below trend through the first quarter of 2025. While job growth appears just off its long-term annual trend rate of about 2.1 percent, the Dallas Fed Texas Business Outlook Surveys (TBOS) point to slowing activity in both the services and manufacturing sectors.