Growth & DSGE
... – In treatments Baseline, Human Central Banker, and Low Friction no persistence, in treatment Menu Cost, shocks are persistent (both Menu Cost and market power are needed for persistence in New Keynesian DSGE model). • Empirical stylized fact is that a shock to interest rates, output, or inflation, ...
... – In treatments Baseline, Human Central Banker, and Low Friction no persistence, in treatment Menu Cost, shocks are persistent (both Menu Cost and market power are needed for persistence in New Keynesian DSGE model). • Empirical stylized fact is that a shock to interest rates, output, or inflation, ...
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... economic turbulence in labour markets is the research on displaced workers, individuals with established work histories who have involuntarily separated from their jobs. Studies such as Jacobson, LaLonde and Sullivan (1993) and Schoeni and Dardia (1996) find substantial longrun earnings losses of 17 ...
... economic turbulence in labour markets is the research on displaced workers, individuals with established work histories who have involuntarily separated from their jobs. Studies such as Jacobson, LaLonde and Sullivan (1993) and Schoeni and Dardia (1996) find substantial longrun earnings losses of 17 ...
Macroeconomic Policy, Growth And Poverty Reduction Terry McKinley
... A number of the papers take an explicitly heterodox approach to restructuring economies. Their orientation is more growth-oriented and more employment-intensive than is customary. Many of them are critical, explicitly or implicitly, of the standard policy package for structural adjustment. Instead o ...
... A number of the papers take an explicitly heterodox approach to restructuring economies. Their orientation is more growth-oriented and more employment-intensive than is customary. Many of them are critical, explicitly or implicitly, of the standard policy package for structural adjustment. Instead o ...
What is Economics?
... 12. When markets fail and do not achieve efficiency government intervention can improve society’s welfare. 13. One person’s spending is another person’s income. 14. Overall spending in the economy can get out of line with the economy’s productive capacity, leading to recession or ...
... 12. When markets fail and do not achieve efficiency government intervention can improve society’s welfare. 13. One person’s spending is another person’s income. 14. Overall spending in the economy can get out of line with the economy’s productive capacity, leading to recession or ...
83081100I_en.pdf
... higher public spending and lower interest rates, combined with a policy of macroeconomic balance and price and real exchange-rate stability (via a dirty float), would open the way for higher private-sector investment. Nonetheless, total gross investment, which had fallen by 26% in 1997-2001, grew by ...
... higher public spending and lower interest rates, combined with a policy of macroeconomic balance and price and real exchange-rate stability (via a dirty float), would open the way for higher private-sector investment. Nonetheless, total gross investment, which had fallen by 26% in 1997-2001, grew by ...
Published in TDRI Quarterly Review Vol. 13 No. 2 June 1998, pp. 15
... demand. Unlike most previous analyses of similar questions, the model acknowledges that labor is mobile between sectors, and also that total agricultural land area fluctuates in response to economic and technological signals.3 Thus, in the model, agricultural wages are determined by nonagricultural ...
... demand. Unlike most previous analyses of similar questions, the model acknowledges that labor is mobile between sectors, and also that total agricultural land area fluctuates in response to economic and technological signals.3 Thus, in the model, agricultural wages are determined by nonagricultural ...
Modelling unemployment in the presence of excess labour supply
... Egypt has opted in the past to play a more active and direct role in shaping socio-economic structures. Development planning emerged as a significant tool of the state in performing its functions and responsibilities. I refer here to Said (1996) and Assaad (2007) that provide interesting in-depth an ...
... Egypt has opted in the past to play a more active and direct role in shaping socio-economic structures. Development planning emerged as a significant tool of the state in performing its functions and responsibilities. I refer here to Said (1996) and Assaad (2007) that provide interesting in-depth an ...
What Can Labor Productivity Tell Us About the U.S. Economy?
... consumption is possible with gains in (a) labor income, (b) profits and capital gains of businesses, and (c) public sector revenue. As labor productivity grows, it may be possible for all of these to increase simultaneously, without gains in one coming at the cost of one of the others.4 It is eviden ...
... consumption is possible with gains in (a) labor income, (b) profits and capital gains of businesses, and (c) public sector revenue. As labor productivity grows, it may be possible for all of these to increase simultaneously, without gains in one coming at the cost of one of the others.4 It is eviden ...
4. S D upply and
... employment may decelerate on the back of the slowdown in economic activity. Industrial production contracted for four consecutive months in the February-May period, while the PMI employment index, a leading indicator for employment developments, maintains its low level compared to the first quarter, ...
... employment may decelerate on the back of the slowdown in economic activity. Industrial production contracted for four consecutive months in the February-May period, while the PMI employment index, a leading indicator for employment developments, maintains its low level compared to the first quarter, ...
How Does an Economy Work?
... • FitzGerald, J., 2013 “Financial crisis, economic adjustment and a return to growth in the EU”, Revue de l’OFCE Debates and policies, No.127 pp. 277-302 http://www.ofce.sciences-po.fr/pdf/revue/127/revue-127.pdf Look at one or two of these publications for the EU and its component economies • IMF W ...
... • FitzGerald, J., 2013 “Financial crisis, economic adjustment and a return to growth in the EU”, Revue de l’OFCE Debates and policies, No.127 pp. 277-302 http://www.ofce.sciences-po.fr/pdf/revue/127/revue-127.pdf Look at one or two of these publications for the EU and its component economies • IMF W ...
Unpacking policy imperatives - Mpumalanga Provincial Government
... sutainability & resilience • Inclusive rural economy ...
... sutainability & resilience • Inclusive rural economy ...
Cumulative Causation in a Structural Economic Dynamic Approach
... demand side simultaneously rendering the model capable of performing an analysis of structural change in a multi-sector economy. In this model, exogenous technological progress increases real per capita income through lower prices. The higher per capita income is translated into higher consumption o ...
... demand side simultaneously rendering the model capable of performing an analysis of structural change in a multi-sector economy. In this model, exogenous technological progress increases real per capita income through lower prices. The higher per capita income is translated into higher consumption o ...
1. Introduction Well documented stylized facts regarding observed
... Allowing a two-sector framework is one way to capture missing dynamics and to counter the weak propagation mechanism in standard RBC models. Assuming that optimizing agents encounter no market failure and that productivity shocks are serially independent across sectors, a sector-specific shock will ...
... Allowing a two-sector framework is one way to capture missing dynamics and to counter the weak propagation mechanism in standard RBC models. Assuming that optimizing agents encounter no market failure and that productivity shocks are serially independent across sectors, a sector-specific shock will ...
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES FROM “HINDU GROWTH” TO PRODUCTIVITY SURGE:
... We next present a series of possible explanations for this shift and show that none of them can satisfactorily account for the boom of the early 1980s. There was not much liberalization in the 1980s, and the little that took place happened during the second half of the 1980s. The Indian economy rema ...
... We next present a series of possible explanations for this shift and show that none of them can satisfactorily account for the boom of the early 1980s. There was not much liberalization in the 1980s, and the little that took place happened during the second half of the 1980s. The Indian economy rema ...
MICHIGAN ECONOMIC UPDATE Office of Revenue and Tax Analysis
... Between December 2008 and December 2009, employment fell substantially in all 17 major labor market areas with a median employment decline of 4.8 percent. The Ann Arbor MSA saw the smallest decline (-3.3 percent). The Flint MSA saw the largest employment drop (-8.6 percent), followed by HollandGrand ...
... Between December 2008 and December 2009, employment fell substantially in all 17 major labor market areas with a median employment decline of 4.8 percent. The Ann Arbor MSA saw the smallest decline (-3.3 percent). The Flint MSA saw the largest employment drop (-8.6 percent), followed by HollandGrand ...
Working Paper No. 514 The Continuing Legacy of John Maynard
... argued, his favorite explanation of equilibrium with unemployment utilized a static model in which expectations—both short-run and long-run—are held constant, uninfluenced by outcome. Again, firms produce only what they expect to sell at profit, and it is not necessary for them to have been disappoi ...
... argued, his favorite explanation of equilibrium with unemployment utilized a static model in which expectations—both short-run and long-run—are held constant, uninfluenced by outcome. Again, firms produce only what they expect to sell at profit, and it is not necessary for them to have been disappoi ...
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).