The Asian Financial Crisis 1997-1998 and Malaysian Response: An
... characteristic of high saving rates (around 33.5 percent of GDP) and its GDP growth rate was highly impressive (8.08 - 8.94) during 1991-95. As a result, Thai economy had become a center of attraction to international speculators, many of whom had channeled their large sum of capital out of Japan (w ...
... characteristic of high saving rates (around 33.5 percent of GDP) and its GDP growth rate was highly impressive (8.08 - 8.94) during 1991-95. As a result, Thai economy had become a center of attraction to international speculators, many of whom had channeled their large sum of capital out of Japan (w ...
THE FIRST INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
... calibrations of these models have aimed for consistency with the new view (Galor and Weil 2000, Hansen and Prescott 2002, Kremer 1993). Indeed, for some models a sharp increase in the growth rate would be a major problem (Clark, 2003). There are, of course, serious imperfections in the data and a tr ...
... calibrations of these models have aimed for consistency with the new view (Galor and Weil 2000, Hansen and Prescott 2002, Kremer 1993). Indeed, for some models a sharp increase in the growth rate would be a major problem (Clark, 2003). There are, of course, serious imperfections in the data and a tr ...
Chapter 9 Key Issue #1x
... Fig. 9-5: Students per teacher, primary school level. Primary school teachers have much larger class sizes in LDCs than in MDCs, partly because of the large numbers of young people in the population (Fig. 2-15). ...
... Fig. 9-5: Students per teacher, primary school level. Primary school teachers have much larger class sizes in LDCs than in MDCs, partly because of the large numbers of young people in the population (Fig. 2-15). ...
Answers to Workshop 8
... (b) Explain why an increase in injections will lead to a multiplied rise in national income. Because the increased injections will stimulate extra production and thus generate extra incomes. Some of the extra incomes will then be withdrawn by households (depending on the mpw) and some will be spent. ...
... (b) Explain why an increase in injections will lead to a multiplied rise in national income. Because the increased injections will stimulate extra production and thus generate extra incomes. Some of the extra incomes will then be withdrawn by households (depending on the mpw) and some will be spent. ...
Bank of England Inflation Report February 2014 Output and supply
... ONS data for the three months to November 2013 and Bank staff estimates for 2013 Q4. The blue line is based on ONS data and Bank staff estimates for 2013 Q1. (b) Difference between the unemployment rate and Bank staff’s central estimate of the medium-term equilibrium unemployment rate. (c) Differenc ...
... ONS data for the three months to November 2013 and Bank staff estimates for 2013 Q4. The blue line is based on ONS data and Bank staff estimates for 2013 Q1. (b) Difference between the unemployment rate and Bank staff’s central estimate of the medium-term equilibrium unemployment rate. (c) Differenc ...
Economics: Today and Tomorrow
... The Theory of Monetarism (cont.) • Many economists who do not favor fiscal policy as a way of stabilizing the economy believe monetary policy is the answer. • Monetarists support the monetarism theory. • Monetarism is often linked with economist ...
... The Theory of Monetarism (cont.) • Many economists who do not favor fiscal policy as a way of stabilizing the economy believe monetary policy is the answer. • Monetarists support the monetarism theory. • Monetarism is often linked with economist ...
ch22
... Output gap Potential real GDP ActualrealGDP Inflation rate Autonomous inflation Inflation sensitivity Output gap ...
... Output gap Potential real GDP ActualrealGDP Inflation rate Autonomous inflation Inflation sensitivity Output gap ...
Reading Legitimation Crisis During the Meltdown
... are key factors in explaining the transformation of social systems. Marx is wrong, however, to think that moralities and worldviews are simply reflections of underlying, more basic, economic conditions. Worldviews and moralities, Habermas insists, have their own rationally-reconstructable, stage-lik ...
... are key factors in explaining the transformation of social systems. Marx is wrong, however, to think that moralities and worldviews are simply reflections of underlying, more basic, economic conditions. Worldviews and moralities, Habermas insists, have their own rationally-reconstructable, stage-lik ...
Full Paper
... It looks that there are two main choices. The first one is the “soft” version when the government became involved into the process of the regulation of the national economy taking the initiative in the control of leading economic functions. The second possible choice is the command economy. In this ...
... It looks that there are two main choices. The first one is the “soft” version when the government became involved into the process of the regulation of the national economy taking the initiative in the control of leading economic functions. The second possible choice is the command economy. In this ...
Sustaining Vietnam`s growth: The productivity challenge
... and growth, but that will not be sufficient to sustain the broad-based growth from which Vietnam has benefited in recent years. Experience shows that variations in industry-specific government action go a long way toward explaining divergences in how sectors perform across economies—but that those a ...
... and growth, but that will not be sufficient to sustain the broad-based growth from which Vietnam has benefited in recent years. Experience shows that variations in industry-specific government action go a long way toward explaining divergences in how sectors perform across economies—but that those a ...
NEWS RELEASE News Release No. 2007/58/DEC Contacts
... money can buy. The new PPPs replace previous benchmark estimates, many of them from 1993 and some dating back to the 1980s. The global report brings together the results of the International Comparison Program and the Eurostat-OECD PPP program. The report also provides estimates of gross domestic pr ...
... money can buy. The new PPPs replace previous benchmark estimates, many of them from 1993 and some dating back to the 1980s. The global report brings together the results of the International Comparison Program and the Eurostat-OECD PPP program. The report also provides estimates of gross domestic pr ...
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES PROPAGATION OF SECTORAL SHOCKS Russell Cooper John Haltiwanger
... intersection determines the levels of output for the two sectors for given (w2,p2). For I small, both curves have a positive intercept term and slopes less than one, since p2>w2 from (5) and ph(p)
... intersection determines the levels of output for the two sectors for given (w2,p2). For I small, both curves have a positive intercept term and slopes less than one, since p2>w2 from (5) and ph(p)
Notes
... desk can begin to implement new policy immediately. Of course, this is restricted to trading hours, but that is what is most relevant for any actual impact of interest rate changes or shifts in liquidity. impact on interest rates: look at the data! (excel spreadsheet) So in conclusion: 1. Fed can re ...
... desk can begin to implement new policy immediately. Of course, this is restricted to trading hours, but that is what is most relevant for any actual impact of interest rate changes or shifts in liquidity. impact on interest rates: look at the data! (excel spreadsheet) So in conclusion: 1. Fed can re ...
Chapter 20: LR and SR Concerns
... have stopped looking for work (so they don’t count as unemployed) – Result: ↓ in the measured unemployment rate – So at any given time, we might have more people who actually want a job than is measured by the unemployment rate ...
... have stopped looking for work (so they don’t count as unemployed) – Result: ↓ in the measured unemployment rate – So at any given time, we might have more people who actually want a job than is measured by the unemployment rate ...
2nd ed Chapter 6
... • Therefore, those with higher human capital usually get paid more than those with less. • Natural attributes can add to a workers unique skill set. People may get paid more due to these natural assets or abilities. • Some industries will compensate workers with higher wages for taking on dangerous ...
... • Therefore, those with higher human capital usually get paid more than those with less. • Natural attributes can add to a workers unique skill set. People may get paid more due to these natural assets or abilities. • Some industries will compensate workers with higher wages for taking on dangerous ...
Document
... The dynamic AD curve slopes downward because a given growth rate of the money stock implies a unique growth rate of nominal GDP consistent with equilibrium. In other words, at any given rate of money creation (M/M), an increase in the GDP growth rate (Y/Y) has to decrease the price inflation rate ...
... The dynamic AD curve slopes downward because a given growth rate of the money stock implies a unique growth rate of nominal GDP consistent with equilibrium. In other words, at any given rate of money creation (M/M), an increase in the GDP growth rate (Y/Y) has to decrease the price inflation rate ...
14.02 Principles of Macroeconomics Problem Set 1 *Solution*
... the unemployment rate & the CHANGE in inflation (When the unemployment rate is low, inflation tends to increase.) (We will revisit the Phillips Curve in chapter 8 again.) 4. Inflation is bad for the economy because goods and services are more expensive. Uncertain. (page 33) Inflation usually leads t ...
... the unemployment rate & the CHANGE in inflation (When the unemployment rate is low, inflation tends to increase.) (We will revisit the Phillips Curve in chapter 8 again.) 4. Inflation is bad for the economy because goods and services are more expensive. Uncertain. (page 33) Inflation usually leads t ...
Free Market and Other Economic Systems
... Explain that the entrepreneur sees an economic need and tries to fill it. Explain that entrepreneurs must have the freedom to start new business ventures but must accept the responsibilities of that freedom. Explain that entrepreneurs must be willing to take risks, handle rejection, survive financia ...
... Explain that the entrepreneur sees an economic need and tries to fill it. Explain that entrepreneurs must have the freedom to start new business ventures but must accept the responsibilities of that freedom. Explain that entrepreneurs must be willing to take risks, handle rejection, survive financia ...
The Employment Problem in South Africa
... First-year economics students are taught that demand curves are downward-sloping but not vertical. In the labor market, this has two implications: other things equal, (1) higher wages lower employment and (2) lower wages raise employment. Not a pretty choice, but then again, economics has been calle ...
... First-year economics students are taught that demand curves are downward-sloping but not vertical. In the labor market, this has two implications: other things equal, (1) higher wages lower employment and (2) lower wages raise employment. Not a pretty choice, but then again, economics has been calle ...
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).