Events and Webinars

We run a worldwide programme of insightful conferences, roundtables, webinars and podcasts presented by our economic experts.

Conference

Filter by

Showing 1-5 of 5
Webinar
Key Themes for Australia’s Economy in 2025: Growth, Policy, and Election Impacts

with Sean Langcake | Online | December 5, 2024

The prospects for the Australian economy are set to improve in 2025, with easier policy settings and lower inflation set to boost growth. But the economy is still facing capacity constraints, which in some instances are being exacerbated by a high level of public spending. This webinar will explore the key forces that will shape 2025, including how the economy will shape the Federal election; how long the RBA will stay on the side lines before cutting rates; when will the labour market eventually ease, and what the early stages of the second Trump presidency is likely to mean for the Australian economy.

Request Recording
Webinar
The impact of the strong dollar on emerging markets

with Adam Slater and Ben May | Online | May 28, 2024

We examine the potential impact of the recent rise in the dollar on emerging markets, looking at the channels by which the dollar can impact emerging countries, how these impacts have played out so far and might have changed over time and the outlook and risks going forward.

Request Recording
Webinar
Will lower inflation mean the MPC cuts rates faster?

with Andrew Goodwin and Edward Allenby | Online | February 15, 2024

The UK inflation outlook has been transformed by steep falls in oil and gas prices and a softening in core price pressures and we think there’s a good chance that inflation will be back at the 2% target in April. The case for loosening monetary policy looks strong, but will the MPC agree? In this webinar we look at how the inflation and monetary policy outlooks will evolve in 2024.

Request Recording
Webinar
Monetary policy puzzles

with Arup Raha | Online | November 15, 2023

There is significant uncertainty as Asian economies approach the new year. There are two wars being fought, China faces structural headwinds, and we are not fully sure of the damage to the balance sheets of firms and households from Covid. Plus, higher oil prices, a stronger US dollar, and high US bond yields are restricting what policymakers in Asia can do. We try and wade through all this and arrive at the most likely outlook for Asian economies.

Request Recording

Trusted By

Sign up to our Resource Hub to download the latest and most popular reports.