Policy Briefs
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- PB25-1: Eight principles for the 2025 tax policy debate (that Republicans and Democrats should be able to agree on)

- Kimberly Clausing
- PB24-15: Is the World Trade Organization still relevant?

- Alan Wolff
- PB24-14: The rise of US economic sanctions on China: Analysis of a new PIIE dataset

- Martin Chorzempa, Mary Lovely and Yuting (Christine) Wan
- PB24-13: Mistaken identities make for bad trade policy

- Maurice Obstfeld
- PB24-12: Is the United States undergoing a manufacturing renaissance that will boost the middle class?

- Robert Lawrence
- PB24-11: Was something structurally wrong at the FOMC?

- Alan Blinder
- PB24-10: Did supply chains deliver pandemic-era inflation?

- Philip Levy
- PB24-9: Economic implications of revoking China's permanent normal trade relations (PNTR) status

- Megan Hogan, Warwick McKibbin and Marcus Noland
- PB24-8: Modernizing the US Exchange Visitor Skills List

- Michael Clemens and William Kerr
- PB24-7: Misconceptions about US trade deficits muddy the economic policy debate

- Maurice Obstfeld
- PB24-6: Egypt's 2023-24 economic crisis: Will this time be different?

- Ruchir Agarwal and Adnan Mazarei
- PB24-5: East Africa's potential role in US graphite supply chains

- Cullen S. Hendrix
- PB24-4: Restructuring Sovereign Debt: The Need for a Coordinated Framework

- Sean Hagan and Brad Setser
- PB24-3: The influence of gasoline and food prices on consumer expectations and attitudes in the COVID era

- Joanne Hsu
- PB24-2: The Inflation Surge in Europe

- Patrick Honohan
- PB24-1: Why Trump's tariff proposals would harm working Americans

- Kimberly Clausing and Mary Lovely
- PB23-17: America's payoff from engaging in world markets since 1950 was almost $2.6 trillion in 2022

- Gary Clyde Hufbauer and Megan Hogan
- PB23-16: Monetary policy in Latin America: The easing cycle has begun

- Alejandro Werner
- PB23-15: Food insecurity: What can the world trading system do about it?

- Alan Wolff and Joseph Glauber
- PB23-14: Despite disruptions, US-China trade is likely to grow

- Megan Hogan and Gary Clyde Hufbauer
- PB23-13: Russia's invasion of Ukraine has cemented the European Union's commitment to carbon pricing

- Jacob Kirkegaard
- PB23-12: Korea has increased its lending to emerging-market and developing economies but faces risks if their debt problems grow

- Julieta Contreras and Adnan Mazarei
- PB23-11: Korea faces opportunities as well as risks under the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework

- Jeffrey J. Schott and Megan Hogan
- PB23-10: How US chip controls on China benefit and cost Korean firms

- Martin Chorzempa
- PB23-9: "Stan the Man": On Stanley Fischer and MIT

- Olivier Blanchard
- PB23-8: How did Korea's fiscal accounts fare during the COVID-19 pandemic?

- Joseph Gagnon and Asher Rose
- PB23-7: How an international agreement on methane emissions can pave the way for enhanced global cooperation on climate change

- Kimberly Clausing, Luis Garicano and Catherine Wolfram
- PB23-6: Why the proposed Brussels buyers club to procure critical minerals is a bad idea

- Cullen S. Hendrix
- PB23-5: Can the World Trade Organization be saved? Should it?

- Alan Wm. Wolff
- PB23-4: The international tax agreement of 2021: Why it's needed, what it does, and what comes next?

- Kimberly Clausing
- PB23-3: Economic sanctions against Russia: How effective? How durable?

- Jeffrey J. Schott
- PB23-2: Multilateral development banks are key to unlocking low-carbon investments in developing economies

- Steven Fries
- PB23-1: Will China's impending overhaul of its financial regulatory system make a difference?

- Martin Chorzempa Martin Chorzempa and Nicolas Veron
- PB22-17: Have trade agreements been bad for America?

- Alan Wm. Wolff, Robert Lawrence and Gary Clyde Hufbauer
- PB22-16: Building downstream capacity for critical minerals in Africa: Challenges and opportunities

- Cullen S. Hendrix
- PB22-15: How to save the WTO with more flexible trading rules

- Robert Lawrence
- PB22-14: EU carbon border adjustment mechanism faces many challenges

- Gary Clyde Hufbauer, Jeffrey J. Schott, Megan Hogan and Jisun Kim
- PB22-13: CHIPS Act will spur US production but not foreclose China

- Gary Clyde Hufbauer and Megan Hogan
- PB22-12: Soaring demand is driving double-digit import price inflation in the United States

- Caroline Freund
- PB22-11: Corruption risks loom large over financing of green infrastructure

- Creon Butler, Sean Hagan and Dominic Martin
- PB22-10: Is South Korea vulnerable to EU and US carbon border restrictions?

- Jeffrey J. Schott and Megan Hogan
- PB22-9: The online gig economy's impact is not as big as many thought

- Lee Branstetter
- PB22-8: South Korea should prepare for its exposure to US-China technology tensions

- Mary Lovely and Abigail Dahlman
- PB22-7: Bad news for the Fed from the Beveridge space

- Olivier Blanchard, Alex Domash and Lawrence H. Summers
- PB22-6: China's CPTPP bid spurs South Korea to act on Asia-Pacific trade pacts

- Jeffrey J. Schott
- PB22-5: Fiscal support and monetary vigilance: Economic policy implications of the Russia-Ukraine war for the European Union

- Olivier Blanchard and Jean Pisani-Ferry
- PB22-4: For inflation relief, the United States should look to trade liberalization

- Gary Clyde Hufbauer, Megan Hogan and Yilin Wang
- PB22-3: The case for a cautiously optimistic outlook for US inflation

- David Reifschneider and David Wilcox
- PB22-2: The European Union renews its offensive against US technology firms

- Gary Clyde Hufbauer and Megan Hogan
- PB22-1: Shift to renewable energy could be a mixed blessing for mineral exporters

- Cullen S. Hendrix