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The Weekly Briefing from Capital Economics

Capital Economics
The Weekly Briefing from Capital Economics
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  • Is AI killing jobs, and when does the growth payoff arrive?
    Where is the big macro payoff from the surge in artificial intelligence investment? And is AI wiping out entry-level jobs? The latest episode of The Weekly Briefing from Capital Economics unpacks these questions and examines what this new wave of technology really means for growth and labour markets.The episode also marks the reopening of the US government with a clear assessment of the economic outlook, and explores how fiscal risks are disrupting politics across the US and Europe. These pressures are set to shape policy debates well into 2026.Analysis and events referenced in this episodeRead: How to think about AI investmentRead: Has the AI “jobpocalypse” begun?Read: China summer investment slump likely to be short-livedWatch: EM Drop-In: India at the geo-economic crossroadsCapital Economics events
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  • The Rachel Reeves tax threat, the Supreme Court tariffs test and the fate of the AI boom
    Who was Rachel Reeves really speaking to when she hinted at higher taxes this week? How much of a threat is the Supreme Court to Treasury tariff revenues? And how useful is “G2” as a lens for the new global order? Group Chief Economist Neil Shearing unpacks these big global macro questions in the latest episode of The Weekly Briefing from Capital Economics. Also on the show, Chief Markets Economist John Higgins assesses whether this week’s sell-off marks the end of the great AI-driven US equity boom, or was just a wobble on the way to new highs.Analysis and events referenced in this episodeRead: UK Autumn Budget 2025 PreviewRead: How could the Budget influence UK housing?Drop-In: India at the geo-economic crossroadsDrop-In: Commercial Property Outlook - What to watch out for in 2026Read: Reliance on tech is a double-edged swordRead: What to make of the mixed reaction to this week’s big-tech results
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  • Driving in fog, standing on ice: The Fed and the fragile trade truce
    The Fed is trying to calibrate policy in the midst of a government shutdown that’s effectively cut off the flow of data. Jerome Powell says that when you’re driving in fog, you should slow down – but there’s still a case for the FOMC to follow this past week’s rate cut with another move in December, says Deputy Chief North America Economist Stephen Brown. He talks to David Wilder about why the state of the US economy argues for another cut this year, but fewer in 2026 than markets currently expect.That Fed meeting wasn’t the week’s only big event. In Korea, Donald Trump held the first face-to-face meeting of his second term with Xi Jinping. The one-year truce resulting from that meeting has eased near-term US-China trade tensions, but much could still go wrong, warns China Economist Leah Fahy. She discusses what might plunge bilateral relations back into crisis, the health of China’s economy, and why – even if Washington clears Chinese firms to buy cutting-edge AI chips – they may not do so.Analysis and events referenced in this episode:Drop-In: The Fed, ECB and Bank of England – Latest decisions and policy outlookCapital Economics EventsRead: Fed cuts and ends QT, but further loosening not guaranteedRead: Bank of Canada cuts but thinks it has done enoughXi-Trump talks buy China time to decouple at its own paceThe economic and market impact of AI
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  • Trump and Xi, CPI and the Fed, oil and sanctions
    Out of the darkness of a shuttered US government comes a rare data release – and it’s a CPI report that’s given markets some relief as the week draws to a close. But does September’s inflation data really clear the way for Fed rate cuts in December as well as October, as investors now expect?In this week’s episode of The Weekly Briefing from Capital Economics, Group Chief Economist Neil Shearing explains why the Fed is likely to stay cautious, previews key upcoming central bank meetings, and looks ahead to next week’s much-anticipated Donald Trump-Xi Jinping summit in South Korea.Also on the show, the US Treasury’s new sanctions on Russia’s two biggest oil exporters have brought a key risk to our below-consensus oil price forecasts to the fore. Chief Climate and Commodities Economist David Oxley discusses how much this move could shake up the outlook – and whether Trump will actually follow through with full enforcement.Analysis and events referenced in this episode:Read: China ramping up use of export controlsDrop-In: Argentina’s mid-term elections – A referendum on Milei’s reformsDrop-In: The Fed, ECB and Bank of England – Latest decisions and policy outlook
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  • US–China trade war – What’s driving the latest escalation
    In just a few days, US–China relations have taken a troubling turn. How did we go from the goodwill of the London and Madrid bilaterals to the current war of words, the threats and the counter-threats? Is this simply pre-APEC brinkmanship, or the start of a more fundamental breakdown in relations between Washington and Beijing? And how great are the risks of a miscalculation that spills over into the global economy? In this special episode of The Weekly Briefing from Capital Economics, Group Chief Economist Neil Shearing and Head of China Economics Julian Evans-Pritchard discuss the past, present and future of US–China relations. They explore key questions, including:• What’s driving Beijing’s new controls on rare earths, and whether the government could reverse course• What’s wrong with US perceptions of China’s economic health – and why those perceptions could prove dangerous • How the global economy will need to keep adjusting to a fracturing US-China relationshipAnalysis referenced in this episodeThe fracturing of the Global EconomyUS may revive plans to curb financial ties with ChinaGlobal Economics Outlook: US leads, others lag, in uneven global economyCAP: Economy holding up, but growth remains weakChina’s push for innovation is not lifting productivity
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About The Weekly Briefing from Capital Economics

Capital Economics, a world leading provider of macroeconomic insight, presents The Weekly Briefing – the show with all you need to know about what's happening in the global economy and markets. From the Fed's next decision to China's slowdown to moves in equities, bonds and FX, each week, our team of economists take apart the big economic and market stories and highlight the issues that investors should be paying more attention to.
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