Communism, Poverty, and Demographic Change in North Vietnam
In: Population and development review, Band 24, Heft 2, S. 235
ISSN: 1728-4457
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In: Population and development review, Band 24, Heft 2, S. 235
ISSN: 1728-4457
In: Journal of the Australian Population Association, Band 13, Heft 2, S. 169-186
In: Carnegie Rochester Conference series on public policy: a bi-annual conference proceedings, Band 43, S. 157-162
ISSN: 0167-2231
In: Carnegie Rochester Conference series on public policy: a bi-annual conference proceedings, Band 18, S. 45-50
ISSN: 0167-2231
In: Journal of political economy, Band 86, Heft 6, S. 1159-1160
ISSN: 1537-534X
In: Journal of Monetary Economics, Band 4, Heft 1, S. 85-102
In: Carnegie Rochester Conference series on public policy: a bi-annual conference proceedings, Band 7, S. 99-100
ISSN: 0167-2231
In: Population, Resources and Development; International Studies in Population, S. 107-117
John Hope Bryant, successful self-made businessman and founder of the nonprofit Operation HOPE, says business and political leaders are ignoring the one force that could truly re-energize the stalled American economy: the poor. If we give poor communities the right tools, policies, and inspiration, he argues, they will be able to lift themselves up into the middle class and become a new generation of customers and entrepreneurs. Raised in poverty-stricken, gang-infested South Central Los Angeles, Bryant saw firsthand how our institutions have abandoned the poor. He details how business lo
In: Research Department staff report
In: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis 54
In: Staff report / Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, Research Department 54
In: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
"According to the folklore of economics, game theory has failed. This paper argues that that is an incorrect interpretation of the game theory literature. When faced with a well-posed problem, game theory provides a solution. When faced with an ill-posed problem, game theory fails to provide a solution. This is, indeed, the best one can hope for from a method of analysis! Further, some suggestions are made for facing game theory with well-posed economic problems"--Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis web site
In: Research Department staff report 62
In: PACS file Nr. 2600
"Our suggestion consists of three postulates: assets are valued only in terms of their payoffs, perfect foresight, and complete and costless markets under laissez-faire. Together these postulates imply that the crucial anomaly, rate-of-return dominance of "money", "is to be explained by legal restrictions"--Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis web site
In: Research Department staff report
In: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis 50
In: Staff report 50
In: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
"A simple model of the process of learning in a diverse economy is presented. This model produces a stylized business cycle with shocks which precipitate the learning process. All agents have the same information, which implies that this business cycle cannot be reduced by improved information flow, counter to many models of output and employment fluctuation"--Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis web site
In: Research Department staff report
In: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis 53
In: Staff report 53
In: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
"In a simple, coherent, general equilibrium model it is demonstrated why stock market prices do not reflect costly but socially useless information"--Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis web site
In: Research Department staff report
In: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis 56
In: Staff report / Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, Research Department 56
In: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
"The recurrent banking panics of the 19th century and the Great Depression of the 1930s are widely viewed as failures of our economic system. A simple version of Samuelson's overlapping generations model is used to generate such failures of Walrasian equilibrium. The spontaneous "panics" generated involve a collapse of bank credit, causing in turn a drop in investment demand. The model suggests that both the recent technological advances in the intermediation industry and the current move towards deregulation of that industry are ominous developments"--Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis web site
In: Research Department staff report
In: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis 47
In: Staff report 47
In: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
"Long-term contracts are explained as equilibrium strategies of supergames. In the specific coherent general equilibrium model provided, limited mobility of labor, in the form of a fixed cost of moving, generates long-term contracts"--Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis web site