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Skanda Amarnath

Executive Director skanda@employamerica.org

About

As co-founder and Executive Director of Employ America, Skanda both leads our economic policy advocacy and ensures the long-term sustainability of the organization. Skanda’s commitment to our mission of full employment informs all of his work, from regular analyses of price and jobs data, to interpreting and forecasting market conditions, to developing new frameworks for Federal Reserve policy, strategy, and communication.

Skanda draws on a foundation of knowledge and career experience at the intersection of finance and policy. He was Vice President at MKP Capital Management operating as a market economist and strategist, and previously served as an Analyst within the Capital Markets function of the Research Group at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. He has undergraduate degrees in Applied Mathematics and Economics from Columbia, and holds a Juris Doctor degree from Columbia Law School.

A frequent media guest and commentator, Skanda has been featured or quoted in the New York Times, the Atlantic, Heatmap News, Politico, Vox, the Wall Street Journal, Forbes, the American Prospect, the Washington Post, and more. He is also a regular contributor to Bloomberg’s Odd Lots newsletter. Skanda is based in Jersey City, NJ, and enjoys cooking, tennis, and cycling in his spare time.

Skanda Amarnath's Work

691 Posts
Skanda Amarnath

This monitor is a reflection of how we update our assessments of economic growth in real-time as we get meaningful updates from macroeconomic data releases; please see here for more details about how to interpret this information. Bottom Line From Today's Public Data Releases: The ISM Manufacturing Report

The surprise announcement of OPEC cuts this weekend has caught market participants and the Biden administration off-guard. OPEC's "voluntary" cuts to crude oil production have pushed up crude oil prices across the futures curve. From our vantage point, these OPEC cuts are a potentially welcome development

We think it’s too early to make any judgments about June dots but it seems clearer that Susan Collins’ priors remain geared towards further tightening, while Neel Kashkari consistently sounded more cautious about macroeconomic implications from banking turmoil.

This monitor is a reflection of how we update our assessments of economic growth in real-time as we get meaningful updates from macroeconomic data releases; please see here for more details about how to interpret this information. Bottom Line From The Last Two Days' Public Data Releases: The personal

While there are prescriptive upshots to this piece, this piece is meant to get at the core descriptive points about how monetary policy works. There is plenty of room to debate optimal policy and optimal macroeconomic objectives, but we should first be clear about what the Fed's approach

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