Recessions cause substantial economic pain through elevated unemployment and financial distress for individuals, families, and businesses. Monetary policy is a primary tool that U.S. policymakers use to support the macroeconomy and reduce the pain of economic downturns. Equitable Growth works to improve our understanding of how monetary policy affects the business cycle, unemployment, and inequality to deliver robust, broad-based economic growth.
Featured work
New research examines the historical macroeconomic effects of tariffs and sheds light on current U.S. trade policies
March 4, 2026
March 4, 2026
The state of the U.S. economy one year into the second Trump administration
February 23, 2026
February 23, 2026
The Federal Reserve must maintain its independence for the U.S. economy to thrive
August 28, 2025
August 28, 2025
Why measuring inflation is surprisingly challenging
April 5, 2023
April 5, 2023
What are the distributional effects of monetary policy?
November 17, 2022
November 17, 2022
Good U.S. monetary policy can’t fix bad U.S. fiscal policy
February 18, 2020
February 18, 2020
Explore Content in Monetary Policy264
How life experiences affect the views of U.S. monetary policymakers
March 21, 2017
March 21, 2017
Changing sources of inflationary pressures in the United States
March 15, 2017
March 15, 2017
Thinking about levels when it comes to macroeconomic policy targets
March 2, 2017
March 2, 2017
What’s behind the decline in U.S. interest rates?
February 6, 2017
February 6, 2017
An uncertain time at the Federal Reserve
February 1, 2017
February 1, 2017
What have we learned about geographic cross-sectional fiscal multipliers?
January 24, 2017
January 24, 2017
Functional finance vs. conventional finance: What’s really at stake?
November 1, 2016
November 1, 2016
Delivering equitable growth: strategies for the next Administration
October 31, 2016
October 31, 2016
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