13,444 research outputs found

    3MT : A fine time to find primes

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    We all have a shared history; when we were in primary school, our teachers told us that a number is prime if it’s only divisible by one and itself. We might also share severe scarring, from when we popped our little hand in the air and asked the question: primes - what are they good for

    The costs of anticipated inflation

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    Inflation (Finance)

    The slow recovery

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    Economic conditions - United States ; Gross domestic product

    Consumer confidence and the outlook for consumer spending

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    Consumer behavior ; Consumption (Economics)

    The Federal budget deficit, saving and investment, and growth

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    Deficit financing ; Saving and investment ; Economic development

    Inflation premiums, budget deficits

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    Inflation (Finance) ; Crowding out (Economics) ; Budget deficits ; Labor productivity

    Managed floating and the independence of interest rates

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    Interest rates ; Foreign exchange rates ; Europe

    A generalized uncovered interest parity model of exchange rates

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    Sticky price monetary models of exchange rates, while reasonable theoretically, have been disappointing empirically. Out-of-sample predictions have been little or no better than those from a naive model of no change. The most likely reason is that shocks to the market's expectation of the future equilibrium real exchange rate weaken the stability of the association between exchange rates and the real interest rate differentials. This study identifies three types of shocks that appear to be empirically important. These are productivity growth, which changes the relative price of traded goods at home versus abroad, government budget deficits, and the real price of oil. ; These factors along with real interest rates are shown to explain at least 80 percent of the longer run variation in both the trade-weighted dollar and bilateral rates against the dollar. An error correction model that includes these factors is shown to have out-of-sample prediction errors for changes in the trade-weighted dollar that are 30 to 45 percent lower than those from a naive model of no change, at horizons of four to eight quarters. The prediction errors for bilateral rates against the dollar are almost as low.Foreign exchange rates ; Econometric models ; Prices ; Interest rates
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