Economic Research
Papers
Finance and Economics Discussion Series
April 2025
No News is Bad News: Monitoring, Risk, and Stale Financial Performance in Commercial Real Estate
Samuel K. Hughes and Joseph B. Nichols
April 2025
Agglomeration and sorting in U.S. manufacturing
April 2025
QE, Bank Liquidity Risk Management, and Non-Bank Funding: Evidence from U.S. Administrative Data
Matthew R. Darst, Sotirios Kokas, Alexandros Kontonikas, Jose-Luis Peydro, and Alexandros P. Vardoulakis
Papers
International Finance Discussion Papers
February 2025
How do Firms in Different Sectors Organize their Supply Chains? Evidence from Transaction-Level Import Data
Sebastian Heise, Justin R. Pierce, Georg Schaur, and Peter K. Schott
February 2025
Estimating the Volume of Counterfeit U.S. Currency in Circulation
February 2025
Geopolitics Meets Monetary Policy: Decoding Their Impact on Cross-Border Bank Lending
Swapan-Kumar Pradhan, Viktors Stebunovs, Előd Takáts, and Judit Temesvary
FEDS Notes
Tracking consumer sentiment versus how consumers are doing based on verified retail purchases
Sinem Hacıoğlu Hoke, Leo Feler, Samantha Mitchell, and Jack Chylak
Data, Models and Tools
A large-scale estimated general equilibrium model of the U.S. economy for FRB/US Model
Models of daily yield curves, and a dynamic term structure model of Treasury yields
Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF):
Information on families' balance sheets, pensions, income, and demographic characteristics
View selected research data from the Federal Reserve Board's working papers and notes series.
Estimated Dynamic Optimization (EDO) Model:
A medium-scale New Keynesian dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) model of the U.S. economy.
Disclaimer: The economic research that is linked from this page represents the views of the authors and does not indicate concurrence either by other members of the Board's staff or by the Board of Governors. The economic research and their conclusions are often preliminary and are circulated to stimulate discussion and critical comment.
The Board values having a staff that conducts research on a wide range of economic topics and that explores a diverse array of perspectives on those topics. The resulting conversations in academia, the economic policy community, and the broader public are important to sharpening our collective thinking.