8,426 research outputs found
A simple model of the transformational recession under a limited mobility constraint
This paper considers the impact on sectoral outputs and employments of rapid and large changes in relative prices, such as those which occurred in transition economies during the 1990s. A simple general equilibrium model is developed in which price changes are induced by a tax reform and resource mobility is restricted. The reform is designed to improve the quality of the price system, but is shown to cause a recession the size of which is proportional to the initial tax distortion. It is also demonstrated that a wage flexibility would moderate the magnitude of the recession, but this gain would be obtained at a cost in longer term efficiency, and would be, in any case, unsustainable
An International Comparison of Small Business Employment
Contrary to popular perceptions, the United States has a much smaller small-business sector (as a share of total employment) than other countries at a comparable level of economic development, according to this new CEPR report. The authors observe that the undersized U.S. small business sector is consistent with the view that high health care costs discourage small business formation, since start-ups in other countries can tap into government-funded health care systems
A Simple Model of the Transformational Recession Under a Limited Mobility Constraint
This paper considers the impact on sectoral outputs and employments of rapid and large changes in relative prices, such as those which occurred in transition economies during the 1990s. A simple general equilibrium model is developed in which price changes are induced by a tax reform and resource mobility is restricted. The reform is designed to improve the quality of the price system, but is shown to cause a recession the size of which is proportional to the initial tax distortion. It is also demonstrated that a wage flexibility would moderate the magnitude of the recession, but this gain would be obtained at a cost in longer term efficiency, and would be, in any case, unsustainable.Output falls, Central Europe, Former Soviet Union, contractionary impact, relative prices, transition economies
An International Comparison of Small Business Employment
Contrary to popular perceptions, the United States has a much smaller small-business sector (as a share of total employment) than other countries at a comparable level of economic development, according to this new CEPR report. The authors observe that the undersized U.S. small business sector is consistent with the view that high health care costs discourage small business formation, since start-ups in other countries can tap into government-funded health care systems.small business, employment, health care
Estimation of Apollo lunar dust transport using optical extinction measurements
A technique to estimate mass erosion rate of surface soil during landing of
the Apollo Lunar Module (LM) and total mass ejected due to the rocket plume
interaction is proposed and tested. The erosion rate is proportional to the
product of the second moment of the lofted particle size distribution N(D), and
third moment of the normalized soil size distribution S(D), divided by the
integral of S(D)D^2/v(D), where D is particle diameter and v(D) is the vertical
component of particle velocity. The second moment of N(D) is estimated by
optical extinction analysis of the Apollo cockpit video. Because of the
similarity between mass erosion rate of soil as measured by optical extinction
and rainfall rate as measured by radar reflectivity, traditional NWS
radar/rainfall correlation methodology can be applied to the lunar soil case
where various S(D) models are assumed corresponding to specific lunar sites.Comment: Acta Geophysica 201
Monetary Policy and Regional Interest Rates in the United States, 1880-2002
The long running debate among economic historians over how long it took regional financial markets in the United States to become fully integrated should be of considerable interest to students of monetary unions. This paper reviews the debate, discusses the implications of various hypotheses for the optimality of the US monetary union, and presents some new findings on the origin and diffusion of monetary shocks. It appears that financial markets were integrated in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in the sense that monetary shocks were routinely transmitted from one part of the United States to another. In particular, shocks to interest rates in the eastern financial centers were routinely transmitted to the periphery. However, it also appears that during this period significant shocks to bank lending rates in the periphery often arose on the periphery itself. This suggests that a nineteenth century monetary authority that relied on operations confined to eastern financial centers would have had a difficult time managing the U.S. monetary union. After World War II the problem of eruptions on the periphery declined.
Can government policies increase national long-run growth rates?
We obtain time series estimates of the long run growth rates of 17 OECD countries, and test the hypothesis that these are the same across countries. We find that we cannot reject this hypothesis for the first and last three decades of the 20th century. We conclude that: (i) there are few, if any, feasible policies available that have a significant effect on long run growth rates, and; (ii) any policies that can raise national growth rates must be international in scope. The results therefore have bleak implications for the ability of countries to affect their long run growth rates.economic policy, technological change, convergence, economic growth
Land Grant Application- Lane, John (Buxton)
Land grant application submitted to the Maine Land Office on behalf of John Lane for service in the Revolutionary War, by their widow Betsey.https://digitalmaine.com/revolutionary_war_me_land_office/1547/thumbnail.jp
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