Get Ready for More Coronavirus Disinflation, at Least in the Short Run
The Billion Prices Project
by Alberto Cavallo
10M ago
Online inflation as measured by the MIT Billion Prices Project/PriceStats, which tracks prices in real time on a daily basis on websites such as Amazon.com, has continued to fall throughout the month of May, even going slightly negative (implying some deflation). How can such disinflation be possible, given that the Federal Reserve has expanded its balance sheet by trillions of dollars over just the past few weeks, and that the coronavirus has distorted global supply chains, causing shortages ..read more
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In the Lockdown Economy, Old Measures of Inflation Get It Wrong
The Billion Prices Project
by Alberto Cavallo
10M ago
Inflation is one of the great question marks of the coronavirus era. For the technicians of inflation, there’s a more immediate challenge: how to measure it properly. The problem, according to Alberto Cavallo is that “the basket for a typical consumer during lockdown is very different ..read more
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China Tariffs and Coronavirus a Double Hit to American Retailers
The Billion Prices Project
by Alberto Cavallo
10M ago
American retailers have yet to pass along higher prices caused by Chinese tariffs, but shrinking product demand caused by the coronavirus could change that, warns Alberto Cavallo ..read more
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Brookings – “Hutchins Roundup: State estate taxes, occupational licensing, and more”
The Billion Prices Project
by Alberto Cavallo
10M ago
Since 2018, the U.S. has imposed import tariffs ranging from 10 to 50 percent on goods from China. Using data collected at the border and at retailers, Alberto Cavallo of Harvard University and coauthors estimate that, on average, foreign exporters have passed 92% of the cost of the tariffs on to U.S businesses in the form of higher prices ..read more
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Forbes – “Trump Still Doesn’t Know Who Pays Tariffs”
The Billion Prices Project
by Alberto Cavallo
10M ago
A May 2019 study by economists from Harvard University, the University of Chicago and the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston on the impact of tariffs on the U.S. economy found that the cost of tariffs “has fallen largely on the U.S ..read more
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The New York Times – “Trump’s China Deal Leaves the Global Economy as Uncertain as Ever”
The Billion Prices Project
by Alberto Cavallo
10M ago
President Trump’s trade truce with China may have temporarily cooled tensions between the world’s two largest economies. Anew paper by researchers at Harvard University, the University of Chicago and the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston suggests that businesses and consumers in the United States are feeling an impact from the trade fight and that the pain could escalate ..read more
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The Economist – “Technology is making inflation statistics an unreliable guide to the economy”
The Billion Prices Project
by Alberto Cavallo
10M ago
Amazon is used to fielding accusations: that it has killed off physical retail business, that it mistreats warehouse workers, that it abuses its dominant platform in online sales. So perhaps it is not a surprise that some people also blame it for low inflation. In 2017 Janet Yellen, then chair of the Federal Reserve, wondered aloud if cut-throat online competition might be stopping goods-producers raising prices even in a world of rising demand. Alberto Cavallo of Harvard Business School has found that Amazon’s prices are 6% lower than those of eight large retailers, and 5% lower than on those ..read more
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BBC News – “Trump’s tariffs puts Apple’s golden goose at risk”
The Billion Prices Project
by Alberto Cavallo
10M ago
Donald Trump has threatened to impose a sweeping new round of trade tariffs against imports from China. According to analysis by Reuters, it would mean 92% of hardware sold by Apple would face levies. If the tariffs are indeed imposed in December, it could mean several outcomes - none of which Apple will be particularly keen on, explained Alberto Cavallo, an associate professor at Harvard Business School ..read more
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Get Ready for More Coronavirus Disinflation, at Least in the Short Run
The Billion Prices Project
by Florencia
4y ago
Online inflation as measured by the MIT Billion Prices Project/PriceStats, which tracks prices in real time on a daily basis on websites such as Amazon.com, has continued to fall throughout the month of May, even going slightly negative (implying some deflation). How can such disinflation be possible, given that the Federal Reserve has expanded its balance sheet by trillions of dollars over just the past few weeks, and that the coronavirus has distorted global supply chains, causing shortages ..read more
Visit website
In the Lockdown Economy, Old Measures of Inflation Get It Wrong
The Billion Prices Project
by Florencia
4y ago
Inflation is one of the great question marks of the coronavirus era. For the technicians of inflation, there’s a more immediate challenge: how to measure it properly. The problem, according to Alberto Cavallo is that “the basket for a typical consumer during lockdown is very different ..read more
Visit website

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