Staff Reports| www.newyorkfed.org
Randall Akee reflects on an American Economics Association panel focused on racial and ethnic representation in economics.| Brookings
High prices and rising debt put pressure on household budgets this year: A look at the New York Fed’s top five Liberty Street Economics blog posts of 2024.| Liberty Street Economics
The December 2024 update of the economic forecasts generated by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) model.| Liberty Street Economics
The authors use data on wholesale and retail payments to understand the bank runs of March 2023.| Liberty Street Economics
The authors find a swath of firms suffering valuation losses on tariff-announcement days and a link between those losses and the firms' future performance.| Liberty Street Economics
A look at the effect of tariff announcements on U.S. stock returns in assessing the overall impact of the US-China trade war.| Liberty Street Economics
The authors use data from a confidential syndicated loan registry to analyze the lender specialization and diversification behavior of banks.| Liberty Street Economics
A look at bank runs and how they have been a consequence of imminent failure, rather than the original cause, for bank failures in the U.S.| Liberty Street Economics
A look at the predictability of bank failures based on simple accounting metrics from publicly available financial statements that measure insolvency risk.| Liberty Street Economics
A look at why U.S. banks fail, using a study of more than 5,000 bank failures to understand if they are caused by bank runs or deteriorating solvency.| Liberty Street Economics
A look at how letters of recommendation for PhD economists differ by gender, race, or ethnicity and how these differences relate to early career outcomes.| Liberty Street Economics
An update of the economic forecasts generated by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) model.| Liberty Street Economics
The DSGE model forecast is not an official New York Fed forecast, but only an input to the Research staff’s overall forecasting process. The New York Fed DSGE Model is a product of the Applied Macroeconomics and Econometrics Center (AMEC).| www.newyorkfed.org