Listing 1 - 10 of 53 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Inflation (Finance) -- Research. --- Inflation (Finance) --- Finance --- Business & Economics --- Money --- Research --- Research. --- Natural rate of unemployment
Choose an application
Inflation (Finance). --- Inflation (Finance) --- Finance --- Business & Economics --- Money --- Natural rate of unemployment
Choose an application
Commodity exchanges. --- Inflation (Finance) --- Finance --- Natural rate of unemployment --- Commodities exchange --- Commodity markets --- Exchanges, Commodity --- Exchanges, Produce --- Produce exchanges --- Futures market --- Commercial products --- Produce trade --- Speculation
Choose an application
This book is an economic analysis of the Kipper und Wipper inflation of 1619-23, the most serious German inflation before the hyperinflation following World War I, with a particular focus on how it affected people's lives and behavior. The volume features full-page reproductions of rare contemporary broadsheets-early forerunners of the modern newspaper-with striking illustrations and engaging texts. Published here in their entirety and for the first time in superb English translation, they are a unique window on society at the time and give a voice to the people who were actually devastated by the inflation.
Broadsides -- Germany -- History -- 17th century. --- Inflation (Finance) -- Germany -- History -- 17th century. --- Inflation (Finance) --- Broadsides --- Finance --- Business & Economics --- Money --- History --- Ballad-sheets --- Broadsheets --- Broadside ballads --- Natural rate of unemployment --- Journalism --- Street literature --- E-books
Choose an application
This book addresses the topical issue of whether the current environment in the US and other major countries, where quantitative easing is used to boost the economy, is conducive to the emergence of hyperinflation. This is a controversial and highly debated issue. Using both economics and history, the author challenges the view that quantitative easing will not lead to hyperinflation and argues that hyperinflation, or at least high inflation, is likely to appear eventually. The book examines all the propositions put forward for and against the eventuality of hyperinflation in the US, using ill
Quantitative easing (Monetary policy) --- Monetary policy. --- Inflation (Finance) --- Finance --- Natural rate of unemployment --- Monetary management --- Economic policy --- Currency boards --- Money supply --- QE (Monetary policy) --- Queasing (Monetary policy) --- Banks and banking, Central --- Monetary policy --- E-books
Choose an application
This book's central theme is that a policymaker's role is to enhance the public's ability to coordinate their price information, price expectations, and economic activities. This role is fulfilled when policymakers maintain inflation stability. Inflation persists less when an implicit or explicit inflation target is met. Granato and Wong argue that inflation persistence is reduced when the public substitutes the prespecified inflation target for past inflation. A by-product of this co-ordination process is greater economic stability. In particular, inflation stability contributes to greater economic output stability, including the potential for the simultaneous reduction of both inflation and output variability - inflation-output co-stabilization (IOCS). Granato and Wong use historical, formal, and applied statistical analysis of business-cycle performance in the United States for the 1960 to 2000 period. They find that during periods when policymakers emphasize inflation stability, inflation uncertainty and persistence were reduced.
Economic policy. --- Business cycles. --- Inflation (Finance) --- Finance --- Natural rate of unemployment --- Economic cycles --- Economic fluctuations --- Cycles --- Economic nationalism --- Economic planning --- National planning --- State planning --- Economics --- Planning --- National security --- Social policy --- Social Sciences --- Political Science
Choose an application
Economists and the governments they advise have based their macroeconomic policies on the idea of a natural rate of unemployment. Government policy that pushes the rate below this point-about 6 percent-is apt to trigger an accelerating rate of inflation that is hard to reverse, or so the argument goes. In this book, Storm and Naastepad make a strong case that this concept is flawed: that a stable non-accelerating inflation rate of unemployment (NAIRU), independent of macroeconomic policy, does not exist. Consequently, government decisions based on the NAIRU are not only misguided but have huge and avoidable social costs, namely, high unemployment and sustained inequality.Skillfully merging theoretical and empirical analysis, Storm and Naastepad show how the NAIRU's neglect of labor's impact on technological change and productivity growth eclipses the many positive contributions that labor and its regulation make to economic performance. When these positive effects are taken into account, the authors contend, a more humane policy becomes feasible, one that would enhance productivity and technological progress while maintaining profits, thus creating conditions for low unemployment and wider equality.
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS --- Economics / Macroeconomics --- Natural rate of unemployment --- Macroeconomics --- Monetary policy --- Business & Economics --- Labor & Workers' Economics --- Natural rate of unemployment. --- Macroeconomics. --- Monetary policy. --- Monetary management --- NAIRU (Non-accelerating inflation rate of unemployment) --- Non-accelerating inflation rate of unemployment --- Economic policy --- Currency boards --- Money supply --- Economics --- Equilibrium (Economics) --- Unemployment --- Inflation (Finance) --- E-books --- 331.31 --- 332.620 --- 333.841 --- 333.846.3 --- AA / International- internationaal --- Economisch beleid --- Werkloosheid: algemeenheden. Philipscurve --- Inflatie --- Verband tussen de geld-, bank- en kredietpolitiek en de lonen
Choose an application
History of Germany and Austria --- anno 1910-1919 --- Inflation (Finance) --- History --- DE / Germany - Duitsland - Allemagne --- 331.156 --- 333.841 --- -332.410943 --- Finance --- Natural rate of unemployment --- Geldwezen van 1914 tot 1945. --- Inflatie. --- Inflation --- Histoire --- Geldwezen van 1914 tot 1945 --- Inflatie --- E-books --- History. --- Inflation (Finance) - Germany - History --- -History
Choose an application
This study explores the relationship between the prevailing concept of 'just profit' and contemporary reactions to the Sixteenth-Century Price Revolution by tracing the evolving meaning of 'profit' in religious, political, and social discourse. Using the period's own macrocosmic-microcosmic analogy, the book examines family correspondence, wills, and court cases in addition to formal tracts to move outward from issues of spiritual profit to family values, employment relationships, and church and state. While England's experience provides a focal point, extensive use of continental sources reveals the problem's broader context. This study should prove particularly useful to those wishing to knit together the now particularized and separated strands of early modern economic, political, social, and religious history.
Prices --- Inflation (Finance) --- Profit --- Prix --- Inflation --- History --- Histoire --- Net income --- Commercial products --- Commodity prices --- Justum pretium --- Price theory --- Business --- Capital --- Distribution (Economic theory) --- Economics --- Finance --- Surplus (Economics) --- Surplus value --- Wealth --- Income --- Risk --- Natural rate of unemployment --- Consumption (Economics) --- Cost --- Costs, Industrial --- Money --- Cost and standard of living --- Supply and demand --- Value --- Wages --- Willingness to pay
Choose an application
For many Germans the hyperinflation of 1922 to 1923 was one of the most decisive experiences of the twentieth century. In his original and authoritative study, Bernd Widdig investigates the effects of that inflation on German culture during the Weimar Republic.
Antisemitism. --- German literature. --- Germany. --- Germany-- Social conditions-- 1918-1933. --- Inflation (Finance). --- Inflation (Finance) - Germany - History. --- Money in literature. --- Germany --- Civilization --- Social conditions --- History --- Economic policy --- Inflation (Finance) --- German literature --- Antisemitism --- History. --- History and criticism. --- Weimar Republic, Germany, 1918-1933 --- Finance --- Natural rate of unemployment
Listing 1 - 10 of 53 | << page >> |
Sort by
|