Remote Work and Housing Demand

The COVID-19 pandemic reshaped the way households work. Nearly a third of employees still worked from home part time or full time as of August 2022. This has significantly increased housing demand and is a key factor explaining why U.S. house prices grew 24% between November 2019 … | Continue reading


@frbsf.org | 1 year ago

How Much Do Supply and Demand Drive Inflation? – Federal Reserve San Francisco

Inflation has remained at levels well above the Federal Reserve’s inflation goal of 2% for over a year. Separating the underlying data from the personal consumption expenditures price index into supply- versus demand-driven categories reveals that supply factors explain about hal … | Continue reading


@frbsf.org | 1 year ago

Why Is U.S. Inflation Higher Than in Other Countries [pdf]

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@frbsf.org | 2 years ago

Why Is U.S. Inflation Higher Than in Other Countries?

Inflation rates in the United States and other developed economies have closely tracked each other historically. Problems with global supply chains and changes in spending patterns due to the COVID-19 pandemic have pushed up inflation worldwide. However, since the first half of 2 … | Continue reading


@frbsf.org | 2 years ago

The Shadow of the Great Depression and the Inflation of the 1970s (1998)

The inflation of the 1970s was a time when uncertainty about prices made every business decision a speculation on monetary policy. During that decade, the annual U.S. inflation rate rose in the 5-10% range, compared to a 0-3% range typical of peacetime America. | Continue reading


@frbsf.org | 2 years ago

Why Has the US Economy Recovered So Consistently from Every Recession for 70yrs?

A remarkable fact about the historical US business cycle is that, after unemployment reached its peak in a recession, and a recovery begins, the annual reduction in the unemployment rate is stable at around one tenth of the current level of unemployment. We document this fact in … | Continue reading


@frbsf.org | 2 years ago

Longer-Run Economic Consequences of Pandemics [pdf]

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@frbsf.org | 3 years ago

The $600 unemployment had little to no effect on job searches

People receiving unemployment insurance benefits during the COVID-19 recession were entitled to $600 of additional payments per week through July. This large increase in benefit payments raised a concern that recipients would delay returning to work. However, analysis suggests th … | Continue reading


@frbsf.org | 3 years ago

Can pandemic-induced job uncertainty stimulate automation?

The COVID-19 pandemic has raised concerns about the future of work. The pandemic may become recurrent, necessitating repeated adoptions of social distancing measures (voluntary or mandatory), creating substantial uncertainty about worker productivity. But robots are not susceptib … | Continue reading


@frbsf.org | 3 years ago

Longer-Run Economic Consequences of Pandemics

How do major pandemics affect economic activity in the medium to longer term? Is it consistent with what economic theory prescribes? Since these are rare events, historical evidence over many centuries is required. We study rates of return on assets using a dataset stretching bac … | Continue reading


@frbsf.org | 4 years ago

Why Is Inflation Low Globally?

A hot economy eventually boosts inflation. Such is the simple wisdom of the Phillips curve. Yet inflation across developed countries has been remarkably weak since the 2008 global financial crisis, even though unemployment rates are near historical lows. What is behind this recen … | Continue reading


@frbsf.org | 4 years ago

Cyclical and Market Determinants of Involuntary Part-Time Employment [pdf]

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@frbsf.org | 4 years ago

Student Loan Debt in the Bay Area: Interactive Maps

Explore student loan borrowing and repayment data from the San Francisco Bay Area in this series of interactive maps of the nine-county region. | Continue reading


@frbsf.org | 4 years ago

A Review of the Fed’s Unconventional Monetary Policy

The Federal Reserve has typically used a short-term interest rate as the policy tool for achieving its macroeconomic goals. However, with short-term rates constrained near zero for much of the past decade, the Fed was impelled to use two unconventional monetary policy tools: forw … | Continue reading


@frbsf.org | 5 years ago

How Futures Trading Changed Bitcoin Prices

From Bitcoin’s inception in 2009 through mid-2017, its price remained under $4,000. In the second half of 2017, it climbed dramatically to nearly $20,000, but descended rapidly starting in mid-December. The peak price coincided with the introduction of bitcoin futures trading on … | Continue reading


@frbsf.org | 5 years ago