
Allan Meltzer on the 1930s Fed’s main concern
08 Apr 2020 Leave a comment
in business cycles, economic growth, economic history, economics of bureaucracy, great depression, macroeconomics, monetarism, monetary economics, Public Choice, unemployment
The calendar effect: changing number of public holidays falling in the working week measures the upper bound of the lockdown on GDP?
03 Apr 2020 Leave a comment
in econometerics, economic growth, health economics, labour economics, labour supply, law and economics, macroeconomics Tags: economics of pandemics
Finn Kydland and the PIGS
02 Apr 2020 Leave a comment
in comparative institutional analysis, economic growth, economics of regulation, financial economics, public economics
Finn Kyland on Ireland
31 Mar 2020 Leave a comment
in budget deficits, business cycles, comparative institutional analysis, economic growth, economics of regulation, financial economics, macroeconomics, Public Choice, rentseeking, unemployment
OECD updates G20 summit on outlook for global economy – @OECD
30 Mar 2020 Leave a comment
in economic growth, health economics, macroeconomics Tags: economics of pandemics
#COVID19 economic impact based on dividend futures: March 26 update
29 Mar 2020 Leave a comment
in economic growth, financial economics, health economics, macroeconomics

From https://voices.uchicago.edu/gormsen/gdp-growth-forecasts-from-dividend-futures/

From https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3555917
The economic impact of Britain’s three-day week from 1 January to 11 March 1974 #COVID19
27 Mar 2020 Leave a comment
in economic growth, economic history, health economics, labour supply, macroeconomics, unions
Lee Ohanian on Japan’s Lost Decade
27 Mar 2020 6 Comments
in business cycles, econometerics, economic growth, economic history, Edward Prescott, fiscal policy, labour supply, macroeconomics, monetary economics
Lee Ohanian on dynamic general equilibrium models to study the Great Depression
26 Mar 2020 Leave a comment
in business cycles, econometerics, economic growth, economic history, financial economics, great depression, history of economic thought, macroeconomics, monetary economics
Samsung and Hyundai are 35% of Korean exports; their sales are 22% of Korean GDP. Nokia represented 26% of Finnish GDP!
25 Mar 2020 Leave a comment
in business cycles, economic growth, industrial organisation, macroeconomics
How much of 20th century growth were one-off productivity gains?
25 Mar 2020 Leave a comment
in discrimination, economic growth, economic history, economics of education, gender, human capital, labour economics, labour supply, occupational choice, occupational regulation, politics - USA, poverty and inequality, Public Choice













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