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A Tour of The World
A Tour of The World

The Limits of Minsky’s Financial Instability Hypothesis as an
The Limits of Minsky’s Financial Instability Hypothesis as an

... Importantly, changed attitudes to risk and memory loss also affect both sides of the market (i.e borrowers and lenders) so that market discipline becomes an ineffective protection against excessive risk-taking. Borrowers and lenders go into the crisis arm in arm. The theoretical framework behind the ...
Globalization and Mathematical Modeling
Globalization and Mathematical Modeling

This PDF is a selection from an out-of-print volume from... of Economic Research
This PDF is a selection from an out-of-print volume from... of Economic Research

... in the manufacturing sector fell by half within a few months (see fig. 5.2). This section tries to determine why output dropped so sharply. Before proceeding to details of the decline in activity and the range of explanations, it is interesting to put the output collapse in perspective, comparing Ea ...
Working Paper No.1 April 2006 Revisiting the Old Industrial Region
Working Paper No.1 April 2006 Revisiting the Old Industrial Region

... the policy influence and impact of its decision-making (Williams 1992, 1996; Smith 2002; Leibovitz 2003). As the EC (now EU) expanded throughout this period, it has had to adapt its policies to address the uneven development of member and accession countries and their regional economies through a ra ...
Data and Methodology - The Economic Impact of the Poultry Industry
Data and Methodology - The Economic Impact of the Poultry Industry

ECONOMICS.PPTs_Ch23.Lecture
ECONOMICS.PPTs_Ch23.Lecture

Human Capital Investment And Economic Development In Nigeria
Human Capital Investment And Economic Development In Nigeria

... in its narrower sense because expenditure on education and training is capable of measurement as compared to healthcare (Jhingan 2005). Healthcare shall however be included in this study. Aigbokhan et al (2007) consider education to be a basic and obvious process by which skills, knowledge and attit ...
Correcting External Imbalances in the European Economy
Correcting External Imbalances in the European Economy

pdf
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... government to society. In 2005 Tony Blair called for a public debate on risk, arguing there was danger “of having a wholly disproportionate attitude to risks we should expect to run as a normal part of life”. He recognised that “a risk-adverse business culture is no business culture at all.”xxv In t ...
Research about Spillover Effect of Foreign Direct Invest
Research about Spillover Effect of Foreign Direct Invest

... employees is far from complete, and comes mainly from developing country studies. Considering that knowledge is scarcer at the same time as the public education systems in developing countries are relatively weaker, it is also possible that spillovers from training are relatively more important ther ...
Economics - Parish Hill High School
Economics - Parish Hill High School

... gas-powered car. He called it the “quadricycle.” The improved version was the Model T.  Ford wanted to produce a large number of cars and sell them at prices ordinary people could afford.  To sell less expensive cars, he adapted the assembly line for his factories. An assembly line is a process in ...
Community Economic Development Theories of Economic Growth A
Community Economic Development Theories of Economic Growth A

democracy or military dictatorship: a choice of
democracy or military dictatorship: a choice of

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Infrastructure policy challenges post-2008

... cost recovery will slowly improve… – Full cost recovery in SA and SSA would demand 25-35% of average income of the poor…unfeasible ...
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[The Macroeconomics of War and Peace

... think GOPO explained a very large fraction of the increase in productivity and real wages. That seems unlikely to me. First, this view is inconsistent with the post-World War I1 facts. As Hall (1988) and Rotemberg and Woodford (1992) have shown, productivity and real wages also rose together with mi ...
AN EMPIRICAL ASSESSMENT OF BINDING CONSTRAINTS TO
AN EMPIRICAL ASSESSMENT OF BINDING CONSTRAINTS TO

... Transformation, 1997; National Economic Recovery Plan, 2003; Macro-Economic Policy Framework 2005; and Short Term Economic Recovery Plan, 2009, among others. ...
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Mexico 1958-86: From Stabilizing Development to the Debt Crisis

... the end of the 1960s. This period has since come to be known as the era of Stabilizing Development (SD). The main objectives of economic policy during SD were to increase private sector savings and capital accumulation, maintain price stability and a fixed parity with the dollar, and increase real w ...
Policy Change and Economic Growth
Policy Change and Economic Growth

in 2005 to 3 per cent GDP in 2006 and... that there was a greater measure of structural
in 2005 to 3 per cent GDP in 2006 and... that there was a greater measure of structural

... Economic and Social Survey of Asia and the Pacific 2006 This boom in remittances is helping to sustain the economy in the face of the sharp decline in garment exports and the long-term decline in sugar production and exports. The expiration of the WTO Agreement on Textiles and Clothing on 1 January ...
CHAPTER 1  TOWARD ENDOGENOUS ECONOMIC GROWTH
CHAPTER 1 TOWARD ENDOGENOUS ECONOMIC GROWTH

... adoption, and the rate of dissemination of new knowledge. These two faces of innovation are in turn closely associated with the attitudes of society at large15. Schumpeter introduced the entrepreneur as an innovator who improved growth by efficiently combining resources, adopting new technical enhan ...
The Relative Impact of Bank Credit on Manufacturing Sector in Nigeria
The Relative Impact of Bank Credit on Manufacturing Sector in Nigeria

... Following a similar line, Aliero et al. (2013) focusing on private sector credit used autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) model to analyze the relationship between private sector credit (credit to the manufacturing sector inclusive) and economic growth in Nigeria. Using time series data for the pe ...
Worker Insecurity and US Macroeconomic Performance
Worker Insecurity and US Macroeconomic Performance

... Where w is the rate of growth of nominal wages, p and p are the actual and expected rates of inflation respectively, q is the rate of growth of productivity, a is a distributed lag of past rates of growth of the real wage, and τ represents the rate of growth of the gross markup (the ratio of price t ...
The Great Depression of 1946
The Great Depression of 1946

CENTRE for ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE DISCUSSION PAPER
CENTRE for ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE DISCUSSION PAPER

< 1 ... 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 ... 547 >

Transformation in economics



Transformation in economics refers to a long-term change in dominant economic activity in terms of prevailing relative engagement or employment of able individuals.Human economic systems undergo a number of deviations and departures from the ""normal"" state, trend or development. Among them are Disturbance (short-term disruption, temporary disorder), Perturbation (persistent or repeated divergence, predicament, decline or crisis), Deformation (damage, regime change, loss of self-sustainability, distortion), Transformation (long-term change, restructuring, conversion, new “normal”) and Renewal (rebirth, transmutation, corso-ricorso, renaissance, new beginning).Transformation is a unidirectional and irreversible change in dominant human economic activity (economic sector). Such change is driven by slower or faster continuous improvement in sector productivity growth rate. Productivity growth itself is fueled by advances in technology, inflow of useful innovations, accumulated practical knowledge and experience, levels of education, viability of institutions, quality of decision making and organized human effort. Individual sector transformations are the outcomes of human socio-economic evolution.Human economic activity has so far undergone at least four fundamental transformations:From nomadic hunting and gathering (H/G) to localized agricultureFrom localized agriculture (A) to internationalized industryFrom international industry (I) to global servicesFrom global services (S) to public sector (including government, welfare and unemployment, GWU)This evolution naturally proceeds from securing necessary food, through producing useful things, to providing helpful services, both private and public (See H/G→A→I→S→GWU sequence in Fig. 1). Accelerating productivity growth rates speed up the transformations, from millennia, through centuries, to decades of the recent era. It is this acceleration which makes transformation relevant economic category of today, more fundamental in its impact than any recession, crisis or depression. The evolution of four forms of capital (Indicated in Fig. 1) accompanies all economic transformations.Transformation is quite different from accompanying cyclical recessions and crises, despite the similarity of manifested phenomena (unemployment, technology shifts, socio-political discontent, bankruptcies, etc.). However, the tools and interventions used to combat crisis are clearly ineffective for coping with non-cyclical transformations. The problem is whether we face a mere crisis or a fundamental transformation (globalization→relocalization).
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