
Adrien Auclert
· Assistant ProfessorVerifiedStanford University · Economics
Active 2011–2026
About
Adrien Auclert is an Associate Professor of Economics at Stanford University, with a focus on inequality, macroeconomics, and international economics. He holds the position of Assistant Professor in the Stanford Economics Department and is actively involved in research as a Research Affiliate at the Center for Economic Policy Research, a Faculty Fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, and a Faculty Research Fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research. His research interests include macroeconomics, financial economics, and monetary economics, with specific attention to inequality, consumption, monetary and fiscal policy, and international economics. Auclert has been recognized for his contributions to monetary research, notably as the inaugural recipient of the Janet Yellen Award for Monetary Research, which honors early-career scholars for significant, policy-relevant contributions to monetary economics research.
Research signals
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Research topics
- Computer Science
- Economics
- Econometrics
- Mathematics
- Mathematical analysis
- Applied mathematics
- Mathematical optimization
- Monetary economics
- Algorithm
- Mathematical economics
Selected publications
New Keynesian Economics with Household and Firm Heterogeneity
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2026-01-01
preprintOpen accessVersion 3
Open MIND · 2026-01-01
other1st authorCorrespondingTop-level PSID Stata dataset used for the analysis in A. Auclert, "Monetary Policy in the Redistribution Channel", American Economic Review, June 2019
Replication Data for: Determinacy and Large-Scale Solutions in the Sequence Space
Harvard Dataverse · 2026-01-22
datasetOpen access1st authorCorrespondingThis is the replication package for "Determinacy and Large-Scale Solutions in the Sequence Space," accepted in 2025 by the Journal of Political Economy: Macroeconomics.
Version 2
Open MIND · 2026-01-01
other1st authorCorrespondingTop-level PSID Stata dataset used for the analysis in A. Auclert, "Monetary Policy in the Redistribution Channel", American Economic Review, June 2019
Version 1
Open MIND · 2026-01-01
other1st authorCorrespondingTop-level PSID Stata dataset used for the analysis in A. Auclert, "Monetary Policy in the Redistribution Channel", American Economic Review, June 2019
Archival Version
Open MIND · 2026-01-01
other1st authorCorrespondingTop-level PSID Stata dataset used for the analysis in A. Auclert, "Monetary Policy in the Redistribution Channel", American Economic Review, June 2019
NBER Macroeconomics Annual · 2025-07-01
article1st authorCorrespondingThe Macroeconomics of Tariff Shocks
National Bureau of Economic Research · 2025-04-01 · 16 citations
reportOpen access1st authorCorrespondingWe study the short-run effects of import tariffs on GDP and the trade balance in an open-economy New Keynesian model with intermediate input trade.We find that temporary tariffs cause a recession whenever the import elasticity is below an openness-weighted average of the export elasticity and the intertemporal substitution elasticity.We argue this condition is likely satisfied in practice because durable goods generate great scope for intertemporal substitution, and because it is easier to lose competitiveness on the global market than to substitute between home and foreign goods.Unilateral tariffs do tend to improve the trade balance, but when other countries retaliate the trade balance worsens and the recession deepens.Taking into account the recessionary effect of tariffs dramatically brings down the optimal unilateral tariff level derived in standard trade theory.
The Race Between Asset Supply and Asset Demand
National Bureau of Economic Research · 2025-11-01 · 2 citations
reportOpen access1st authorCorrespondingWe introduce an asset supply-and-demand approach to analyze the trajectory of US aggregate wealth, real interest rates, and fiscal sustainability.Our framework uses micro-founded and easy-toimplement sufficient statistics to quantify how shifts in demographics, inequality, and other forces affect asset market equilibrium.From 1950 to the present, rapid population aging, rising income inequality, increasing foreign demand for US assets, and declining productivity growth all contributed to a surge in asset demand.Asset supply initially fell, then turned around sharply, mainly driven by increases in government debt and the value of capitalized profits.Overall, asset demand won the race, and interest rates fell.Looking ahead to 2100, population aging will continue to strongly push up asset demand, but at current tax and benefit levels, asset supply will win the race, as rising entitlement costs push up government debt even more.While rising asset demand creates space for debt to eventually reach 250% of GDP without higher interest rates, stabilizing debt at any level requires a permanent fiscal adjustment of at least 10% of GDP.
The Race Between Asset Supply and Asset Demand
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01
preprintOpen access1st authorCorresponding
Recent grants
CAREER: Macroeconomic Implications of Microeconomic Heterogeneity
NSF · $530k · 2021–2027
Heterogeneity, Household Behavior, and the Transmission of Aggregate Shocks
NSF · $496k · 2019–2024
Frequent coauthors
- 98 shared
Matthew Rognlie
National Bureau of Economic Research
- 67 shared
Ludwig Straub
- 27 shared
Martin Souchier
Harvard University Press
- 20 shared
Frederic Martenet
Stanford University
- 20 shared
Hannes Malmberg
University of Minnesota System
- 9 shared
Bence Bardóczy
Federal Reserve
- 4 shared
Rodolfo Rigato
Harvard University Press
- 3 shared
Rishabh Aggarwal
Dr. D. Y. Patil Medical College, Hospital and Research Centre
Awards & honors
- Janet Yellen Awards for Monetary Research
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