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Economic Impact Assessment
Economic Impact Assessment

Output Relationship Over the Business Cycle: Evidence
Output Relationship Over the Business Cycle: Evidence

... advanced economies, few studies focused on transition economies. Izyumov and Vahaly (2002) examined relationship between output and unemployment in 25 transition economies. They divided the countries into groups of reform leaders and reform laggards and examined the validity of Okun’s law for reform ...
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... and fourth lags were used to further analyze this view. The result obtained revealed unidirectional causality moving from inflation to economic growth. He resolved that ...
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... The global economy’s evolution has been dominated by a linear model of production and consumption, in which goods are manufactured from raw materials, sold, used and then discarded as waste. While great strides have been made in improving resource efficiency, any system based on consumption rather t ...
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towards a circular economy: business rationale for an accelerated
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... • Neoclassical (Supply Side) Economics suggests that business cycles are the result of random disturbances to productivity. • The initial impact takes place in labor markets (employment/output) • Capital markets determine the impact on future labor markets (Investment today affects the capital stock ...
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... followed by large financial and uncertainty shocks. Third, focusing on the recovery following the 2009Q2 trough, we estimate that slightly less than half of the slow recovery in employment growth since 2009Q2, compared to 1960-1982 recoveries, is attributable to cyclical factors (the shocks, or fact ...
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Economic Growth in the European Union

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Economic value of the legal services sector

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1 Principles of Macroeconomics, 9e

... B) The federal government makes it easier for college students to obtain loans and this increases the number of students attending college. C) The city of Robesonia builds a new sewage treatment plant. D) Residents of a suburban housing development hire a private security force because they have bee ...
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Economic Fluctuations, Unemployment, and Inflation
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... Copyright ©2017 Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible web site, in whole or in part. ...
Social Structures of Accumulation, the Rate of Profit
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... the future. Thus, economic growth results from capitalist accumulation in pursuit of ever more surplus value. However, the capitalists as a group do not always accumulate -- whether they do ...
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... Besides this time-series comparative static result, the model also makes cross-sectional predictions. In particular, the model implies on the sectoral level a positive correlation between the average labor productivity and the average managerial intensity and a negative correlation between the withi ...
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Macroeconomic Determinants of the Labour Market in Nigeria

... widespread urban unemployment in developing countries. The underpinning of the authors’ assertions was hinged on the view that migrants from the rural areas are attracted to the urban formal sector by expectations of higher wages, even if they are unlikely to find jobs in the formal sector immediate ...
AFRICA`S GROWTH EXPERIENCE A Focus on Sources of Growth
AFRICA`S GROWTH EXPERIENCE A Focus on Sources of Growth

... Economic growth was reasonably strong in much of Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) between 1960 and 1973. For most countries, however, the subsequent two decades were a period of stagnation or decline. Pritchett (1998) shows that there was typically a single main break in the growth trends for most African e ...
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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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