In a new short paper with @rmmasolo, we quantify Brexit’s impact on UK CPI. We identify two waves of price acceleration: one after the referendum, the other after the TCA. In terms of prices, Brexit took until end-2023 to fully play out.
In a new paper with @FedeDiPa, we find that UK aggregate prices (CPI) rose by approximately 7 percent more than the synthetic counterfactual we estimate, between the #Brexit referendum and the end of 2024.
For details check out https://t.co/345LVLYMiw
New SUERF policy brief! How do UK firms adjust their pricing expectations in response to monetary policy? Using DMP survey data, we find that firms react to rate hikes���but differently from financial markets. Press coverage plays a key role.
New paper with same old @FedeDiPa and @MangianteGiaco
We estimate the market’s perceived monetary policy response function for the UK, combining survey and market data
https://t.co/0YEX88QoaS
Exploiting exogenous surprises in inflation and industrial production we find that
Ivan Jaccard passed away but his legacy lives on. The ECB has renamed its summer research internship in his honor—a tribute to his passion for mentoring young economists. Future students, apply to the Ivan Jaccard Internship https://t.co/OYTgac4BVG
Check out the Bank Underground post with @BertholdBrendan, @AmbrogioCB and Alex Haberis summarizing our paper entitled "The Heterogenous Effects of Carbon Pricing: Macro and Micro Evidence"
https://t.co/sb0L7OlnKr
Grateful for the opportunity to present my joint work with @FedeDiPa and @rmmasolo at the @bankofcanada, @ecb, and @NewYorkFed Conference on Expectations Surveys in Frankfurt. Two days of insightful discussions on the role that surveys on expectations can have for policymakers
Very happy to share that our paper entitled "Do firm expectations respond to monetary policy announcements?" with @MangianteGiaco and @rmmasolo is forthcoming at the Journal of Monetary Economics.
Very happy to share that our latest work with @FedeDiPa and @rmmasolo has been published in the Journal of Monetary Economics!
We study whether UK firms' price expectations respond to monetary policy announcements from the @bankofengland
[1/4]
🧵SWP 1076 by Brendan Berthold (Lausanne), Ambrogio Cesa-Bianchi (BoE), Federico Di Pace (BoE) + Alex Haberis (BoE) explores the economic effects of carbon pricing policies for member countries of the EU Emissions Trading System (ETS)… https://t.co/BEwIQxhrIJ
It is an immense pleasure to see our Brexit paper with Ben Broadbent, @td_econ, @rHarrisonMacro, and Silvana Tenreyro finally in print at the @RevEconStudies. It has been a long but enjoyable journey. For more info about the paper follow @td_econ thread below.
Our paper
"The Brexit Vote, Productivity Growth and Macroeconomic Adjustments in the United Kingdom"
with Ben Broadbent @FedeDiPa@rHarrisonMacro and Silvana Tenreyro
is now published in REStud!
https://t.co/BkuIzOjA8Y @RevEconStudies
A brief thread about the paper:
Forthcoming in AEJ: Macroeconomics: "Terms-of-Trade Shocks Are Not All Alike" by Federico Di Pace, Luciana Juvenal, and Ivan Petrella. https://t.co/UX909ZPeSS
🚨Final call for applying to our PhD Internship programme! 🚨
Applications close tomorrow, 5 February (2359 UK time, 0059 CET, 1859 EST). Best of luck to all PhD students!
🧵The Bank of England Agenda for Research (BEAR) sets our key research questions. Alongside the multi-year document published in 2020, we also publish a set of annual "Priority Topics" for each calendar year. 2024's are just out! Read on for more info…
https://t.co/wTvgglZaBl