Our recent SF Fed Blog discusses how appropriately adjusting recent labor market data shows that the growth in labor supply ...
We study the pass-through of corporate taxes into consumer prices, leveraging 1,058 municipal tax rate changes affecting ...
Regional engagement furthers the SF Fed’s mission of advancing the nation’s monetary, financial, and payment systems to build ...
In the wide-ranging conversation, President Daly discussed the major factors shaping the U.S. economy, how the Federal ...
Involuntary part-time employment—the share of people who work less than 35 hours per week but want and are available to work full-time—has increased since 2023. While this contrasts with steady ...
Extreme heat decreases labor productivity in sectors like construction, where much work occurs outdoors. Because construction is an important component of investment, lost productivity today will slow ...
At the onset of the pandemic in 2020, US consumers dramatically changed how they purchased goods and services, favoring credit cards by a significant margin and increasing their use of online payments ...
Shelter costs are one of the largest expenses for most households and an important component of overall inflation. It is therefore important to understand why shelter costs have remained stubbornly ...
The 2007–08 financial crisis was the biggest shock to the banking system since the 1930s, raising fundamental questions about liquidity risk. The global financial system experienced urgent demands for ...
Gender gaps in labor market outcomes during the pandemic are largely due to differences across parents: Employment and labor force participation fell much less for fathers as compared to women and non ...
Immigrants contribute a large portion of the growth in the U.S. population and labor force. However, immigration flows into the United States slowed significantly following immigration policy changes ...