Tag Archives: pass-through

Why didn’t Trump’s tariffs crash the economy in 2025?

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December 31, 2025 — As Donald Trump took office last January, most economists worried that he might adopt the high tariffs he had campaigned on, raising prices of consumer goods and inputs that US households and firms had to pay.  The result would be an increase in inflation, at the same time as a fall in real income.  As a supply shock, it would not be the sort of development that the Federal Reserve could counteract. The damage would be especially large if other countries chose to retaliate with tariffs of their own. read more

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The Phylloxera Analogy: Lessons from Emerging Markets

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      In 2008, the global financial system was grievously infected by so-called toxic assets originating in the United States.  As a result of the crisis, many have asked what fundamental rethinking will be necessary to save macroeconomic theory.  Some answers may lie with models that have in the past been applied to fit the realities of emerging markets — models that are at home with
the financial market imperfections that have now unexpectedly turned up in industrialized countries.  The imperfections include default risk, asymmetric information, incentive incompatibility, procyclicality of capital flows, procyclicality of fiscal policy, imperfect property rights, and other flawed institutions.   To be sure, many of these theories had been first constructed in the context of industrialized economies, but they had not become mainstream there.   Only in the context of less advanced economies were the imperfections undeniable.  There the models thrived.     
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