
Implementing QoS
... Mark with probability that the extra packet creates a loss; User pays per mark and slows down when pay rate reaches budget Revenues = Loss rate (times unit cost) Distributed according to “willingness to pay” By choosing unit cost, adjust loss rate. Throughput is then divided according to user util ...
... Mark with probability that the extra packet creates a loss; User pays per mark and slows down when pay rate reaches budget Revenues = Loss rate (times unit cost) Distributed according to “willingness to pay” By choosing unit cost, adjust loss rate. Throughput is then divided according to user util ...
Secular Stagnation or Stagnation Policy? Steindl after Summers
... ageing societies have also reduced the demand for loanable funds, in particular for capital stock and housing finance, and have increased the supply of funds in those countries with a capital-funded pension system. The supply of loanable funds has also increased because of rising inequality in wealt ...
... ageing societies have also reduced the demand for loanable funds, in particular for capital stock and housing finance, and have increased the supply of funds in those countries with a capital-funded pension system. The supply of loanable funds has also increased because of rising inequality in wealt ...
Exchange Rate Movement of Developing Countries
... stock of reserves should not exist. Even so, the countries either follow a managed float or an independent floating exchange rate system. As many countries are following a pegged exchange rate system the stock of reserves is continuing to be an important factor behind the stability of the exchange r ...
... stock of reserves should not exist. Even so, the countries either follow a managed float or an independent floating exchange rate system. As many countries are following a pegged exchange rate system the stock of reserves is continuing to be an important factor behind the stability of the exchange r ...
MONETARY POLICY TRANSMISSION MECHANISM IN ROMANIA
... consumer price index; three months short term interest rate; unemployment rate; monetary aggregate M2 and wage index over the period 2001.Q1 to 2012.Q4. The data were extracted from International Financial Statistics database. The data are seasonally adjusted, except short term interest rate, and ex ...
... consumer price index; three months short term interest rate; unemployment rate; monetary aggregate M2 and wage index over the period 2001.Q1 to 2012.Q4. The data were extracted from International Financial Statistics database. The data are seasonally adjusted, except short term interest rate, and ex ...
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES IDIOSYNCRATIC PRODUCTION RISK, GROWTH AND THE BUSINESS CYCLE
... Banerjee and Piketty, 1999). This earlier research has focused on the effect of wealth and borrowing constraints on the individual ability to invest in productive capital. We show that incomplete markets also affect the willingness to invest, and has novel implications for capital accumulation and bus ...
... Banerjee and Piketty, 1999). This earlier research has focused on the effect of wealth and borrowing constraints on the individual ability to invest in productive capital. We show that incomplete markets also affect the willingness to invest, and has novel implications for capital accumulation and bus ...
Using The DuPont Decomposing Process To
... performance rates. In this guise, the primary purpose of the DuPont Model is to help understand why one return on owner’s equity, ROE, is superior to another ROE of another investment. The detail in the system of performance ratios that helps explain ROE performance is presented as: ROE = Net Return ...
... performance rates. In this guise, the primary purpose of the DuPont Model is to help understand why one return on owner’s equity, ROE, is superior to another ROE of another investment. The detail in the system of performance ratios that helps explain ROE performance is presented as: ROE = Net Return ...
The Principle of Effective Demand and the State of Post Keynesian
... claim to revolution in economic theory and interpreted the General Theory as another contribution to the theory of business cycles. This is most obvious from the Old Keynesian reliance on wage rigidity to generate involuntary unemployment. But for K ...
... claim to revolution in economic theory and interpreted the General Theory as another contribution to the theory of business cycles. This is most obvious from the Old Keynesian reliance on wage rigidity to generate involuntary unemployment. But for K ...
The real exchange rate and phasing in of oil revenues
... supply of non-tradeable goods therefore increases relative to the supply of tradeable goods and when this happens, the price of non-tradeable goods in relation to tradeable goods starts to fall. The price will continue to fall until the reallocation of factor inputs has ended. In the new long-run eq ...
... supply of non-tradeable goods therefore increases relative to the supply of tradeable goods and when this happens, the price of non-tradeable goods in relation to tradeable goods starts to fall. The price will continue to fall until the reallocation of factor inputs has ended. In the new long-run eq ...
CHAPTER 7 Wage and Price Adjustment: The Phillips Curve and
... Most students shy away from the mathematical derivations presented in this chapter. They prefer not having to go through all of the steps that are needed to derive Equation (15). Although the mathematical derivation of this equation, which describes the upward-sloping aggregate supply curve, is not ...
... Most students shy away from the mathematical derivations presented in this chapter. They prefer not having to go through all of the steps that are needed to derive Equation (15). Although the mathematical derivation of this equation, which describes the upward-sloping aggregate supply curve, is not ...
The external and domestic side of macroeconomic adjustment in
... different macro implications, the implications for the current account remain similar. Therefore for understanding the macroeconomic adjustment process in China, one has to mimic the effects of potential inefficiencies that cause a dampening response of domestic absorption to permanent income shocks th ...
... different macro implications, the implications for the current account remain similar. Therefore for understanding the macroeconomic adjustment process in China, one has to mimic the effects of potential inefficiencies that cause a dampening response of domestic absorption to permanent income shocks th ...
Keynes`s Theory of Depression
... In fact, if wage rates decline, this implies a decrease in costs of production and this makes many investments look more attractive to businesses. This will tend to promote less consumptive spending and more productive spending in the economy. So the economy will become more production oriented and ...
... In fact, if wage rates decline, this implies a decrease in costs of production and this makes many investments look more attractive to businesses. This will tend to promote less consumptive spending and more productive spending in the economy. So the economy will become more production oriented and ...
Exercises for Chapter 26
... a. private saving and so shift the supply of loanable funds left. b. investment and so shift the demand for loanable funds left. c. public saving and so shift the supply of loanable funds left. d. None of the above are correct. ANSWER: c. public saving and so shift the supply of loanable funds left. ...
... a. private saving and so shift the supply of loanable funds left. b. investment and so shift the demand for loanable funds left. c. public saving and so shift the supply of loanable funds left. d. None of the above are correct. ANSWER: c. public saving and so shift the supply of loanable funds left. ...
Kathmandu Institute of Science and Technology
... creates market for goods for selling each at the same time buying and more of production, more of creating demand for other goods”. Every producer finds a buyer. Every supply of output creates equivalent demand for output so that there can never be a problem of general over production. Thus, Say’s l ...
... creates market for goods for selling each at the same time buying and more of production, more of creating demand for other goods”. Every producer finds a buyer. Every supply of output creates equivalent demand for output so that there can never be a problem of general over production. Thus, Say’s l ...
A model of secular stagnation
... natural rate of interest of arbitrary persistence that can, therefore, explain long-lasting slumps. This is particularly relevant when considering the Great Depression in the US (where the short term interest rate started to drop in 1929 only to finally start rising again in 1947) or current day Jap ...
... natural rate of interest of arbitrary persistence that can, therefore, explain long-lasting slumps. This is particularly relevant when considering the Great Depression in the US (where the short term interest rate started to drop in 1929 only to finally start rising again in 1947) or current day Jap ...
Human capital and economic growth in OECD countries
... linkage of human capital and economic growth (The Economist 2002). Theoretically, seminal papers establishing the positive relationship between human capital and growth are Mankiw et al. (1992) as well as Lucas (1988). Empirically, Romer (1989) was among the first to run ad-hoc cross-country regress ...
... linkage of human capital and economic growth (The Economist 2002). Theoretically, seminal papers establishing the positive relationship between human capital and growth are Mankiw et al. (1992) as well as Lucas (1988). Empirically, Romer (1989) was among the first to run ad-hoc cross-country regress ...
When is the Government Spending Multiplier Large?
... number of periods. Once again, we nd that the government spending multiplier is larger when the zero bound is binding. Allowing for capital accumulation has two e!ects. First, for a given size shock it reduces the likelihood that the zero bound becomes binding. Second, when the zero bound binds, t ...
... number of periods. Once again, we nd that the government spending multiplier is larger when the zero bound is binding. Allowing for capital accumulation has two e!ects. First, for a given size shock it reduces the likelihood that the zero bound becomes binding. Second, when the zero bound binds, t ...
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES A MODEL OF SECULAR STAGNATION Gauti B. Eggertsson
... natural rate of interest of arbitrary persistence that can, therefore, explain long-lasting slumps. This is particularly relevant when considering the Great Depression in the US (where the short term interest rate started to drop in 1929 only to finally start rising again in 1947) or current day Jap ...
... natural rate of interest of arbitrary persistence that can, therefore, explain long-lasting slumps. This is particularly relevant when considering the Great Depression in the US (where the short term interest rate started to drop in 1929 only to finally start rising again in 1947) or current day Jap ...
Intense-field ionization of helium
... E = 0.175 atomic units (au) and E = 0.38 au. At E = 0.175 au, the ionization rates undergo an abrupt change in functional form, with the sudden onset of a rapidly increasing component which scales as E4. The electric field strength of 0.2 au is the threshold intensity for the onset of above-barrier ...
... E = 0.175 atomic units (au) and E = 0.38 au. At E = 0.175 au, the ionization rates undergo an abrupt change in functional form, with the sudden onset of a rapidly increasing component which scales as E4. The electric field strength of 0.2 au is the threshold intensity for the onset of above-barrier ...
This PDF is a selection from an out-of-print volume from... of Economic Research Volume Title: The International Transmission of Inflation
... argument or give any empirical evidence to support his conjecture. He just stopped at raising the question. There have been largely two main strands of literature on international monetary economics in recent years. One is the monetary approach (MA), and the other is the portfolio balance approach ( ...
... argument or give any empirical evidence to support his conjecture. He just stopped at raising the question. There have been largely two main strands of literature on international monetary economics in recent years. One is the monetary approach (MA), and the other is the portfolio balance approach ( ...
Grad7
... Keynes noted that investment would be induced when the marginal efficiency of capital exceeds the real rate of interest. As such investment occurs, the marginal efficiency of capital decreases, either because of to diminishing returns to capital or because of an increase in the prices of investment ...
... Keynes noted that investment would be induced when the marginal efficiency of capital exceeds the real rate of interest. As such investment occurs, the marginal efficiency of capital decreases, either because of to diminishing returns to capital or because of an increase in the prices of investment ...