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Latin America and the Caribbean
Las amenazas, reales e imaginadas, de la elección en MéxicoMark Weisbrot / March 14, 2018
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NYT News Story Tells Us That Giving Workers More Power Will Derail Germany's EconomyCEPR / March 14, 2018
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The Washington Post Refuses to Let Facts or Logic Get in the Way of Its Agenda on TradeCEPR / March 13, 2018
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A Bogus ‘Compromise’ Senate Bill Would Prolong Atrocities in YemenMark Weisbrot / March 13, 2018
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Ronald Brownstein Says the Democrats Have Become the Party of Fake Free TradersCEPR / March 13, 2018
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Small Businesses Still Aren't Impressed by the Republican Tax CutCEPR / March 13, 2018
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CPI Rises 0.2 Percent in February, Core Up 1.8 Percent Over Last YearMarch 13, 2018 (Prices Byte)
Dean Baker / March 13, 2018
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CPI Excluding Food, Energy and Shelter Up Just 0.9 Percent Over Last YearThe big jump in the price of energy commodities in January was partially reversed in February with a 0.9 percent drop. This brought the overall inflation rate for the month to 0.2 percent, the same as the core rate. Over the last year, the overall CPI has risen by 2.2 percent, while the core rate has risen by 1.8 percent.
Dean Baker / March 13, 2018
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Reuters Says German Employers Don't Understand Labor Markets, Don't Raise Wages In Spite of Labor ShortageCEPR / March 13, 2018
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ADP Gives More Evidence of a Pickup in Wage Growth at the BottomCEPR / March 12, 2018
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Steel Tariffs and Doctors: A Teachable Moment?Dean Baker
Truthout, March 12, 2018
Dean Baker / March 12, 2018
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Neither Christopher Liddell or Microsoft Support Unbridled Free MarketsCEPR / March 12, 2018
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Down on the Farm: More Hysteria About Steel TariffsThe selective free traders (people who support protectionism that benefits high-income people, but oppose it when it can help ordinary workers) are pulling out all the stops in going after Trump's steel tariffs. Today, the NYT takes the show to rural America where it tells us how much agriculture can be hurt by a trade war.
We meet various farmers worried about the threat of a trade war and get a few random facts thrown in:
"Three out of every five rows of soybeans planted in the United States find their way out of the country; half of those, valued at $14 billion in 2016, go to China alone."
"Two weeks after the administration imposed a tariff on solar panels, China opened an anti-dumping investigation into American exports of sorghum, a grain used in livestock feed. The United States was virtually China’s sole foreign source of sorghum last year, with $1 billion in sales."
There are a few points worth making here. First, if our trading partners do impose barriers to US exports of agricultural goods, then we would see the price of these products fall somewhat in the domestic market. That is bad news for these farmers, but good news for the rest of us who will have lower priced food. The NYT apparently only thinks of consumers when it comes to tariffs raising prices.
The second point is that while the loss of a large market can have a substantial impact on the price of a relatively small volume crop like sorghum since it is a relatively small volume crop the number of farmers affected will be relatively few. Furthermore, most will be able to switch to crops that offer a better return.
CEPR / March 10, 2018
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Latin America and the Caribbean
The Threats, Real and Imagined, of Mexico’s ElectionMark Weisbrot / March 09, 2018
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Employment Rates by 10-Year Age Cohort and GenderKevin Cashman / March 09, 2018
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Job Growth Soars in February, Wage Growth SlowsMarch 9, 2018 (Jobs Byte)
Dean Baker / March 09, 2018