After leaving the RGE in 2007, Setser became a fellow for international economics at the Council on Foreign Relations. In 2009, he took a position with the National Economic Council, as Director of International Economics. In 2011, he moved to the United States Department of the Treasury, where he was the Deputy Assistant Secretary for International Economic Analysis where he worked on Europe's financial crisis, U.S. currency policy, financial sanctions, commodity shocks, and Puerto Rico’s debt crisis.[citation needed]
In 2015, he returned as the Steven A. Tananbaum senior fellow for international economics at the Council on Foreign Relations. He is the author of the economics blog "Follow the Money" about global economic imbalances,[1] which The Washington Post described in 2016 as a "must-read for those in the economics blogosphere".[2]
^Daniel W. Drezner (26 May 2016). "When is transparency a form of economic statecraft?". The Washington Post. Retrieved 25 February 2019. Back in the day, Brad Setser was the go-to guy when it came to debates about cross-border financial flows, macroeconomic imbalances, what China was doing to keep its currency undervalued and whether other countries holding large amounts of U.S. debt was a thing or not. His Council on Foreign Relations blog was a must-read for those in the economics blogosphere who cared about these matters. Then Setser had to go and get a job in the Obama administration. The rest of us were left wandering in the political economy desert.
^Inti Pacheco; Theo Francis. "Apple Rattled Markets With Warning About China. Who's Next?". The Wall Street Journal. U.S. companies competing in China's consumer markets tend to target wealthier customers, where the slowdown is more pronounced, said Brad Setser, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations who was deputy assistant Treasury secretary for international economic analysis in the Obama administration.
^Colby Smith (February 2019). "A potential new snag in US China Trade". Financial Times. If "stable" means the renminbi continues to trade within a band set by officials at China's central bank on a daily basis, then according to Brad Setser at the Council on Foreign Relations, this isn't such a large ask from the US. In fact, China has committed to this kind of policy for many years now — most aggressively since September as Setser's chart shows.