Hints and tips:
...Adam Posen, president at Peterson Institute: Worse....
...Diane Swonk, chief economist at the audit firm Grant Thornton, says the US is now “two million people short of where we should be” due to restrictive immigration policies in place since 2016, even before...
...A growing number of academics now support amendments to the proposed policy, including philosopher Simon Blackburn, economist Diane Coyle and statistician Sir David Spiegelhalter....
...“The UK will be among the last, if not the last, of the high-income economies to regain its pre-pandemic size,” said Adam Posen, president of the Peterson Institute for International Economics and a former...
...Diane Coyle: Probably, but it will also probably be too soon....
...“To expect that the next move might be a cut is not crazy,” said Joe Gagnon, a former Fed official who is now at the Peterson Institute for International Economics....
...Jason Furman, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and former chairman of Barack Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers, says the Business Roundtable survey of big companies’...
...As shown in an excellent analysis by Peterson Institute economist Jeromin Zettelmeyer and his colleagues, there are many forms this could take, and it does not inevitably need to involve nominal writedowns...
...“These are promises and not proposals,” said Diane Swonk of DS Economics....
...The Peterson economists have modelled the fallout for the US economy from the trade war that would probably ensue....
...Here’s a recent contribution to the discussion from Caroline Freund, a trade economist at the Peterson Institute (emphasis mine): Real trade grew on average twice as fast as real GDP from 1990 to 2007,...
...Diane Coyle, professor of economics, University of Manchester To 3-4%....
...Diane Coyle, professor of economics, University of Manchester It depends how seriously the Government takes the geography of the Brexit vote....
...Adam Posen, president, Peterson Institute for International Economics I do not know how much it will change....
...Diane Coyle, professor of economics, University of Manchester More pessimistic than 12 months ago The Brexit vote will tear a hole in the fabric of the economy....
...Diane Coyle, professor of economics, University of Manchester It will harm every economy, because of geopolitical instability if nothing else....
...Adam Posen, president, Peterson Institute for International Economics I think that is the right assessment, an honest self-assessment....
...Adam Posen, president, Peterson Institute for International Economics By 0.75-1.0 per cent (real yoy)....
...Diane Coyle's tribute to Leonard Nimoy: Mr Spock is the ideal rational economic man....
...Diane Coyle, Professor of economics, University of Manchester It's time to normalise. Ultra-low policy rates are distorting asset and savings markets....
...In Washington, I was fortunate to launch the book at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, during the annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank....
...Diane Coyle, Professor of economics, University of Manchester Nothing the government has done will affect housing supply. Almost all their policies have tended to boost demand and therefore prices....
...Diane Coyle, Professor of economics, University of Manchester A Brexit vote would not do much in the short term but the medium term damage would be serious....
...Diane Coyle, Professor of economics, University of Manchester He will more or less be able to cut spending as planned in the next year; further ahead it depends on the political reaction....
...Diane Coyle, Professor of economics, University of Manchester As above. The failure to build enough homes is a massive running sore on the economy....
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