BOSTON FED'S 69TH ECONOMIC CONFERENCE EXAMINES HOW U.S. IS ADAPTING TO A 'CHANGING GLOBAL LANDSCAPE'
The following information was released by the
Researchers explore how volatility, emerging risks, tariffs may impact
By
How is the
That was the key question economists, central bankers, and other researchers explored at the
Participants covered a range of topics related to geopolitical risks, monetary policy, tariffs, and multinational corporations. The conferences keynote address highlighted the evolving role of the
Boston Fed President and CEO
At the same time, greater economic fragmentation could also amplify volatility, leading to less resilient economies, she said.
In any event, the increase in global risks and the movement toward greater economic fragmentation will likely be major, transformative, and intertwined forces shaping our economic landscape in the coming years, Collins said.
Papers and presentations shared during the conference
Researchers presented five papers during the conference, and a panel session explored the evolution of industrial policy. The paper and panel titles are listed below, and the papers and presentations from each session are available on bostonfed.org:
Supply Chain Uncertainty, Energy Prices, and Inflation,
The Costs of Coercion,
Trade Imbalances and the Global Footprint of
Industrial Policy in a New Global Paradigm panel session with
Keynote address: The evolving role of the
Pol Antrs, the Robert G. Ory Professor of Economics at
Antrs gave a historical overview of the U.S.s role in global trade. He also discussed the different ways in which global value chains or global production networks operate, and how they may be impacted by ongoing tariffs.
Antrs said the
He then discussed the evolution of global value chains. He said that since the 1980s, global production processes have become more fragmented. Countries have stopped trading fully finished products as companies began moving different parts of their production processes around the world.
For example, cars and planes assembled in the
Antrs said that some
How is exposure to tariffs impacting
In a session on their paper, Boston Fed senior economist
Barbiero said the coauthors aimed to examine how tariffs could affect a companys employment, investment, prices, profitability, and financial conditions. He said the researchers looked at four factors to study a companys exposure to tariffs, including:
their direct import costs
their indirect import costs through their suppliers who are exposed to tariffs
the extent to which certain tariffs would help protect a company from competitors
whether a company sells to nations that are retaliating against the
Barbiero said they found that in 2018, higher cost exposure led companies to increase their prices. At the same time, the firms profit margins and investment decreased. They also found that export retaliation led to lower profit margins but increased investment.
Barbiero said the coauthors found no benefits to the companies employment or inventories from the 2018 tariffs. However, he noted its possible such benefits could have materialized several years later.
Barbiero said the 2025 tariffs are still ongoing, and their full impacts arent yet known. The economists wrote in their paper that in both years, tariffs raised direct import costs. But they found that tariff exposure for direct importers was 10 times larger in 2025 than in 2018.



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