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Outlook for Economic Activity and Prices (January 2017, The Bank`s
Outlook for Economic Activity and Prices (January 2017, The Bank`s

...  Japan's economy is likely to continue growing at a pace above its potential through the projection period -- that is, through fiscal 2018 -- on the back of highly accommodative financial conditions and the effects of the government's large-scale stimulus measures, with the growth rates in overseas ...
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To view this press release as a file

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2011 Fall Issue - East Stroudsburg University

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... of modern finance theory (which has been anything but distrustful of them). It is instructive to recall how Keynes=s idea that interest rates, rather than wages, might be too high for full employment came to disappear from the theory that was made to bear his name. In Modigliani (1944), two differen ...
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The Costs of Fiscal Inflexibility

... has only a small impact on our results. This is because it is optimal either to accomodate the impact of fiscal shocks on debt (i.e. debt has a random walk character, as in Benigno and Woodford (2005)), or that the optimal speed for correcting debt disequilibrium is slow. Our next section derives th ...
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Ch. 17-21 PowerPoint - Jessamine County Schools
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... vacations, autos, and homes cut back production, which is reflected in a decline in GDP and higher unemployment rates as the production cuts translate into worker layoffs. A similar story emerged in late 2007 as the sub prime crisis in the US morphed into a full-scale financial crisis. It did not ta ...
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Aggregate Demand - FBLA-PBL

... National Association of State Directors of Career Technical Education Consortium. Washington, DC. Career Cluster Resources for Finance. 2012. National Association of State Directors of Career Technical Education ...
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Fiscal multiplier

In economics, the fiscal multiplier (not to be confused with monetary multiplier) is the ratio of a change in national income to the change in government spending that causes it. More generally, the exogenous spending multiplier is the ratio of a change in national income to any autonomous change in spending (private investment spending, consumer spending, government spending, or spending by foreigners on the country's exports) that causes it. When this multiplier exceeds one, the enhanced effect on national income is called the multiplier effect. The mechanism that can give rise to a multiplier effect is that an initial incremental amount of spending can lead to increased consumption spending, increasing income further and hence further increasing consumption, etc., resulting in an overall increase in national income greater than the initial incremental amount of spending. In other words, an initial change in aggregate demand may cause a change in aggregate output (and hence the aggregate income that it generates) that is a multiple of the initial change.The existence of a multiplier effect was initially proposed by Keynes student Richard Kahn in 1930 and published in 1931. Some other schools of economic thought reject or downplay the importance of multiplier effects, particularly in terms of the long run. The multiplier effect has been used as an argument for the efficacy of government spending or taxation relief to stimulate aggregate demand.In certain cases multiplier values less than one have been empirically measured (an example is sports stadiums), suggesting that certain types of government spending crowd out private investment or consumer spending that would have otherwise taken place. This crowding out can occur because the initial increase in spending may cause an increase in interest rates or in the price level. In 2009, The Economist magazine noted ""economists are in fact deeply divided about how well, or indeed whether, such stimulus works"", partly because of a lack of empirical data from non-military based stimulus. New evidence came from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, whose benefits were projected based on fiscal multipliers and which was in fact followed - from 2010 to 2012 - by a slowing of job loss and private sector job growth.
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