Antoine Berthou
@antoineberthou.bsky.social
96 followers 140 following 2 posts
Economist https://sites.google.com/site/antoineberthou/
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Reposted by Antoine Berthou
cepii-paris.bsky.social
📊🅻🅴 𝐆𝐫𝐚𝐩𝐡𝐢𝐪𝐮𝐞-🆃🅷🅴 𝐂𝐡𝐚𝐫𝐭 "La vulnérabilité bilatérale aux importations est plus forte aux États-Unis qu’en Europe" de Kevin Lefebvre et @paulinewbx.bsky.social
www.cepii.fr/BLOG/bi/post...
@denizunalcepii.bsky.social
#econsky #importation
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
antoineberthou.bsky.social
The global economy in pictures : last few days have been tough… I truly hope we are heading towards quieter waters. This will require cold blood and … adults in the room !
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
kevinhorourke.bsky.social
The US is ignoring WTO rules regarding trade in goods. Why should it enjoy WTO rules regarding trade in services? And how does anyone expect the rules-based system. on which countries like Ireland depend, to survive, if countries can pick and choose what rules to follow?
www.rte.ie/news/politic...
Targeting tech firms would be 'extraordinary escalation'
It would be an "extraordinary" escalation for the European Union to target US tech companies in retaliation for US President Donald Trump's blanket tariffs on European goods, the Tánaiste has said.
www.rte.ie
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
voxeu.org
Floods, wildfires, devastation— #climate disasters are growing, yet many remain uninsured. A CEPR-AXA Research Fund event explored the future of #insurability & the role of prevention, pricing, & #policy. More here: 🔗https://cepr.org/voxeu/columns/insuring-world-tomorrow
@wederdim.bsky.social
Insuring the world of tomorrow.
Ulrike Decoene  Beatrice Weder di Mauro.
Intensifying climate extremes are exposing growing gaps in insurance coverage and threatening financial resilience. Drawing on a recent panel hosted at the Collège de France, this column examines how escalating disaster costs, market failures, and the need for better prevention urge to redefine societies’ risk management mechanisms in an increasingly uncertain climate landscape. The discussion highlighted the tension between risk-based pricing and solidarity-based schemes, underlining the necessity of prevention efforts and more equitable risk-sharing arrangements. As climate hazards intensify, striking a sustainable balance between affordability and fiscal viability emerges as a pressing challenge for policymakers, insurers, and society alike.
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
michaelpettis.bsky.social
1/10
"The loss of German manufacturing jobs has been masked by a broader shift in employment trends," the FT notes, citing employment growth in services industries such as real estate, healthcare, communications and public administration.
www.ft.com/content/bdba...
www.ft.com
antoineberthou.bsky.social
The two sides of the same coin 🙃
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
soumayakeynes.ft.com
“I want a slice of bread but also I will howl with rage if you start slicing the bread”
- my two year old
fintwitter.bsky.social
U.S. TREASURY'S BESSENT: OUR STRONG DOLLAR POLICY DOESN'T MEAN OTHER COUNTRIES GET TO HAVE A WEAK CURRENCY POLICY -FBN
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
pantras.bsky.social
10/ Want to dig deeper?

Full paper: antras.scholars.harvard.edu/sites/g/file...

Short version for AEA P&P: antras.scholars.harvard.edu/sites/g/file...

Our six-digit NAICS measure of the APP can be downloaded here: antras.scholars.harvard.edu/sites/g/file...

Replication package available soon.
antras.scholars.harvard.edu
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
pantras.bsky.social
1/ 📢 New paper alert! 📄 Together with Vitalii Tubdenov, we propose a measure of the "Average Period of Production" (APP) to capture the temporal dimension of production processes. It is inspired by Böhm-Bawerk’s capital theory.
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
marionjansen.bsky.social
China has come to dominate global value chains for solar modules & wind turbines, accounting globally for >80% of module production + >70% of production of key turbine components. Is government support part of the success story? Find out more in this new OECD report: www.oecd.org/en/publicati...
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
bobwolfe.bsky.social
terrific interview with @douglasirwin.bsky.social

If you're not a fan of podcasts, here's the transcript
www.ft.com/content/58ec...
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
adamshap.bsky.social
Got the ball rolling on a Fed Economists starter pack go.bsky.app/GudXeoo

Fed economists, let me know if you’re on Bluesky and I’ll add you
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
pgourinchas.bsky.social
Our January 2025 World Economic Outlook Update is out. Global growth will remain steady at 3.3% for 2025-26, broadly aligned with world potential growth that has substantially weakened since before the pandemic. www.imf.org/en/Blogs/Art...
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
jintlecon.bsky.social
New at JIE: "From macro to micro: Large exporters coping with global crises" by Jean-Charles Bricongne, Juan Carluccio, Lionel Fontagné, Guillaume Gaulier, Sebastian Stumpner

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jinteco.2024.104037
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
thomsampson.bsky.social
Nice FT write-up of our new Brexit & trade paper by the always excellent @pmdfoster.bsky.social

Rightly notes that our findings (goods exports⬇️6.4% due to TCA, imports ⬇️3.1%) suggest OBR's forecast (long-run trade ⬇️15%) may be an over-estimate of the impact of Brexit

on.ft.com/4iK8esS
Brexit hit to UK trade less than predicted, says study
Larger companies have adapted to red tape at the border, according to London School of Economics research
on.ft.com
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
mchinn.bsky.social
How many lies can one pack into a single paragraph. See Jeffrey Tucker show you! #econsky
econbrowser.com/archives/202...
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
jasonfurman.bsky.social
1. No exchange rate effect. In this case imports are 10% more expensive for consumers. Exports are the same (because the exchange rate did not change) and the trade deficit shrinks. The entire tariff is paid by Americans.
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
jasonfurman.bsky.social
Tariffs & exchange rates. A short explainer of the simple case of 10% across-the-board tariffs. Let's start with no retaliation.

Brief version: Tariffs will strengthen the U.S. dollar which will reduce impact on consumers but exacerbate it for exporters.

Three cases:
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
michaelpettis.bsky.social
Good Paul Krugman piece on the relationship between the dollar and the US trade deficit: "the trade deficits of the 80s arguably marked the point at which the hollowing out of U.S. manufacturing really got going."

open.substack.com/pub/paulkrug...
The Dollar and the Trade Deficit
What will Trump do when his favorite obsession goes the wrong way?
open.substack.com
Reposted by Antoine Berthou
drodrik.bsky.social
A useful discussion by @michaelpettis.bsky.social of my piece on tariffs. I agree that if (a) an existing current account deficit is inefficient; and (b) a tariff can reduce/correct the deficit, that a tariff can be efficiency enhancing, in a second-best sense. But the caveats are important. +
michaelpettis.bsky.social
1/8
As always, Dani Rodrik presents a nuanced discussion of tariffs without the hysteria that usually surrounds any such discussion. He notes that "an import tariff is a specific combination of two different policies: a tax on...
drodrik.bsky.social
Tariffs are neither a Swiss Army knife for domestic problems nor an effective stick to discipline other nations (as Trump believes). But they can be useful as a shield allowing other (social, environmental, industrial) policies to do their work. My latest www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/t...