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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

    Evidence suggests U.S. house price/rent ratio, real home prices to decline

    The ratio of house prices to rents in the U.S. has risen 20 percent since first quarter 2020, coinciding with the beginning of the pandemic. The ratio is near its previous high in 2006. The future course of inflation may well be influenced by how this now-lofty ratio reverts to a more usual level.

  • Dallas Fed Economics

    Geopolitical oil price risk not a major driver of global macroeconomic fluctuations

    Notwithstanding the attention geopolitical events in oil markets have attracted, we find that geopolitical oil price risk is unlikely to generate sizable recessionary effects.

  • Dallas Fed Economics

    As population trends shift, where will future workers come from?

    Population is a fundamental determinant of a country’s productive capacity. More specifically, labor, along with capital and the efficiency with which the two can be combined (total factor productivity) determine how much a country can produce at any point in time.

  • Dallas Fed Economics

    Mexico nearshoring yet to yield big investment despite global trade tensions

    The resulting reality surrounding nearshoring’s impact on Mexico’s economy is nuanced. While Mexico has made gains, many of them stem from trade diversion rather than large-scale foreign capital relocation.

  • Dallas Fed Economics

    More household savings offset increased government borrowing since 2008

    Large government budget deficits over the past 15 years have led to a large increase in the stock of government debt. But these government deficits have been matched by an increase in U.S. household savings.

  • Dallas Fed Economics

    Blame higher U.S. equity prices for recent moves in U.S. external liabilities

    The U.S. net foreign asset position—the value of foreign assets held by U.S. residents minus the value of U.S. assets held by foreign residents—has fallen sharply since the 2008 Global Financial Crisis.

  • Dallas Fed Economics

    International factors broadly explain postpandemic inflation

    The recent co-movement of inflation across countries, including the U.S., can be explained in part by global and regional factors. Policymakers, who have tended to more closely look closer to home may want to more broadly consider global events and pressures when addressing changing inflation pressures.

  • Dallas Fed Economics

    Impact of inflation shocks on foreign exchange rates reflects central bank stature

    The purchasing power parity theory of exchange rates is easily understood: A basket of goods should have the same price in different markets when that price is expressed in a common currency. However, the relationship between market-determined exchange rates and inflation shocks is not always straightforward. In the short run, central bank transparency can become an important determinant.

  • Dallas Fed Economics

    How the U.S. might outgrow pandemic-era housing (un)affordability problems

    A review of market-based and private forecasters’ expectations suggests that U.S. housing may be at an inflection point. U.S. income growth and, more broadly, the robust U.S. labor market will likely help wring out pandemic-era excesses that led to rapidly deteriorating affordability.

  • Dallas Fed Economics

    Trade liberalization reduces entrepreneurship rate

    Our research suggests that if the world becomes increasingly interconnected through international trade, entrepreneurship rates will decrease over time.