Panel on the Future of Development
Recorded at the @cepr.org Paris Symposium, December 2025
Panellists:
Megan O'Donnell (Gates Foundation)
Dennis Novy (UK FCDO, Warwick University)
Justin Sandefur (Open Philanthropy)
Moderated by Doug Gollin (Tufts)
cepr.org/multimedia/p...
Posts by Dennis Novy
🆕 RFBerlin Discussion Paper! Horng Chern Wong, @dennisnovy.bsky.social, Carlo Perroni & Natalie Chen show how rapid urban structural change affected the urban\city divide by boosting city amenities and containing wages for superstar urban service firms.
🔗 www.rfberlin.com/wp-content/u...
Great to visit our FCDO colleagues in #Barbados and discuss challenges facing small island states in the Caribbean region and innovative climate finance solutions.
Fantastic to meet our local partners from @caribank.bsky.social
UWI CaveHill
IDB
IMF
Dennis Novy on the changing global economic landscape and developing international partnerships
www.omfif.org/meetings/den...
The business of climate technology adoption:
A conference hosted by British International Investment in partnership with CEPR @cepr.org
Opening remarks by FCDO Chief Economist Professor Dennis Novy
www.youtube.com/watch?v=T55P...
Congratulations to Prof. Dennis Novy (@dennisnovy.bsky.social) appointed Chief Economist and Director of Analysis at the UK’s Foreign Office (FCDO).
An inspiring example of academic insight informing global policy.
🔗 Read the full story: https://inomics.link/warwick-bsky
#Econsky #PublicPolicy
Congratulations to CAGE Impact Director @dennisnovy.bsky.social on his appointment to the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office as the lead economic adviser to the Foreign Secretary on the UK’s foreign and international development policy.
When the US administration hiked tariffs on imports from China in 2018/19, research shows that imports from Mexico filled the gap.
@dennisnovy.bsky.social & Natalie Chen discuss the benefits an earlier hike in US tariffs had on Mexico’s exports and employment for #Advantage. 📰
buff.ly/tbn0LUY
🎉Very happy to share that I joined the University of Lisbon’s School of Economics and Management (ISEG) as an Invited Assistant Professor this September🎉.
Excited to be in a great academic environment and a great city! If you’re in Lisbon (or just passing through), feel free to drop me an email!
Great programme for the CEP/LSE-Warwick Junior Trade Workshop on 22 September
@cep-lse.bsky.social @warwickecon.bsky.social
cep.lse.ac.uk/textonly/_ne...
Graph showing the share of transactions invoiced in renminbi and the share of value invoiced in renminbi for imports from China to Argentina from January 2022 to June 2024. The US dollar has traditionally dominated the invoicing of international trade. But could other currencies one day replace it? This column examines a unique policy experiment in Argentina in 2023. Amid a severe dollar shortage, Argentina expanded its currency swap agreement with the People’s Bank of China. The share of imports from China invoiced in renminbi surged rapidly from zero to nearly 50%, displacing the US dollar. Using rich firm-level data on trade and banking, the authors show that lack of dollar availability and connections with a Chinese state-owned bank played a key role in promoting renminbi use.
Lack of dollar availability & connections with a Chinese state-owned bank played a key role in promoting #renminbi use in Argentina, with the share of imports from China invoiced in renminbi having surged from zero to nearly 50% in 2023.
Felipe Benguria, Dennis Novy
cepr.org/voxeu/column...
#EconSky
Felipe Benguria and @dennisnovy.bsky.social on a unique policy experiment in Argentina.
cepr.org/voxeu/colum...
Call for papers
The CEP/LSE – Warwick Junior Trade Workshop will bring together PhD students in the field of international economics for job market paper presentations and discussions. @warwickecon.bsky.social @cep-lse.bsky.social
Submit papers by 27 July.
More ➡️ cep.lse.ac.uk/_new/events/...
Graph showing the shares of US goods imports from China and from Mexico in total US goods imports between 2010 and 2023. There is a red line that marks the start of the trade war in 2018, which is then followed by a drop in imports from China and a smaller increase in imports from Mexico. In 2018 and 2019, the US administration hiked tariffs on imports from China. This column shows that imports from Mexico partly filled the gap, leading to an export and employment surge in Mexico. Using highly disaggregated firm-level data on Mexican exports, combined with detailed employer-employee data, the authors find that US tariffs against China resulted in more employment and higher wages in the Mexican export sector, especially for lower-wage workers such as female, unskilled, and younger employees. The effects were concentrated in technology and skill-intensive manufacturing industries such as chemicals and automotives.
In 2018-2019, the #US administration hiked #tariffs on imports from #China. As a result, imports from #Mexico partly filled the gap, leading to an export and #employment surge in Mexico.
Natalie Chen, Dennis Novy, Diego Solórzano
cepr.org/voxeu/column...
#EconSky
The New Global Economy: Trade Wars and De-dollarisation?
Submissions deadline: 1 July 2025
Conference dates: 27-28 September 2025
Location: Cambridge UK
“Tariffs and Their Implications”
Free to join on 30 April
With
- Teresa Fort
- Jacob J. Lew
- David E. Weinstein
- Jeffry Frieden
- Dennis Novy
@columbiaigp.bsky.social
@columbiauniversity.bsky.social
@columbiasipa.bsky.social
What is the effect of heightened uncertainty on international trade?
➡️ Trade reacts more strongly than domestic economic activity.
Our research:
Trade and Uncertainty | The Review of Economics and Statistics | MIT Press @restatjournal.bsky.social
direct.mit.edu/rest/article...
Great to see our recent PhD student Edoardo Tolva’s paper on the ISoT program.
Joint work with Cristoforoni, Errico and Rodari on “Oligopolies in Trade and Transportation” with great micro data from Chile
@etolva.bsky.social @warwickecon.bsky.social
@jintlecon.bsky.social
New AEJ:Macro paper with Breinlich, Leromain & @dennisnovy.bsky.social
Tests an old Paul Krugman idea: does import protection promote exports through industry-level scale economies?
Find scale economies do operate, but there is also an offsetting supply chain effect 1/
bsky.app/profile/aeaj...
AEJ: Macroeconomics: "Import Liberalization as Export Destruction? Evidence from the United States" by Holger Breinlich, Elsa Leromain, Dennis Novy, and Thomas Sampson. www.aeaweb.org/articles?id=...
🚩 Call for papers 🚩
2nd Midlands Trade & Investment Network ECR Conference
Birmingham, United Kingdom
25 June 2025
t.co/tHORzmixdI
Avinash Dixit says:
New trade theory: Victor Norman, Avinash Dixit, and how it started at Warwick University in 1976
@cage_warwick @warwickecon
@BaldwinRE @PrincetonEcon
warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/econ...
Great interview:
@douglasirwin.bsky.social on US trade policy — past and present
By @alanbeattie.bsky.social
podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/t...
📰Can Europe find its way through the woods in 2025?
Dennis Novy @dennisnovy.bsky.social discusses the challenges for the German economy and its industries in an interview for The New European archive.ph/0XcSv
New research. How has Brexit affected UK trade?
We find TCA reduced goods exports by 6.4%, imports by 3.1%
Smaller firms hardest hit. Around 16,400 firms stopped exporting to the EU entirely
But larger firms' exports unaffected, contributing to relatively small fall in overall trade 1/
Nice FT write-up of our new Brexit & trade paper by the always excellent @pmdfoster.bsky.social
Rightly notes that our findings (goods exports⬇️6.4% due to TCA, imports ⬇️3.1%) suggest OBR's forecast (long-run trade ⬇️15%) may be an over-estimate of the impact of Brexit
on.ft.com/4iK8esS
Hey #EconSky! I am on the market this year.
Check my profile for the thread with the paper!
You can find all the other great candidates from Warwick at @warwickecon.bsky.social