Contains a series of essays
that explore economic issues as they relate to our increasingly globalized world. The reports
also review the Bank's activities during the year,
present financial statements and list directors
and officers
Contains articles
about economic conditions and business development
in Texas, New Mexico and Louisiana, including agriculture,
banking, energy, high-tech, manufacturing and international
trade in this region.
Working papers
from the Dallas Fed Research Department are preliminary
drafts circulated for professional comment. Selected
papers are available online.
Proceedings from the Dallas Fed conference in 2006 that examine the various dimensions in which trade and migration affect economic development, whether individually or jointly, through economic or political forces.
The recent rapid pace of
discovery in life sciences raises a host of economic
issues. These issues are addressed in papers presented
at Dallas Fed conference on April 19, 2002.
China is rapidly transforming
itself into an industrial nation. This article charts
China's progress over the past 25 years as this
country of 1.3 billion begins to embrace market
principles and flex its economic muscles.
The Texas border
community is a complex blend of U.S. and Mexican
cultures, languages and customs, with a dynamic
economy that flourishes amid the diversity. This
series of nine articles explores issues important
to the region's economy—from job growth and
wages to infrastructure demands, maquiladoras and
illegal immigration.
Market forces have come
to China, unleashing the wave of change associated
with economic progress that economist Joseph Schumpeter
referred to as "the churn." This report
relates how privately operated businesses, a return
of entrepreneurial spirit and improved living standards
for many of its citizens are spreading across China.