14,099 research outputs found
Filling up the measure: polemical hyperbole in 1 Thessalonians 2:14-16
Reviewed Book: Schlueter, Carol J. Filling up the measure: polemical hyperbole in 1 Thessalonians 2:14-16. Sheffield: JSOT Pr, 1994
Processing for obtaining good quality water from sewage
Sewage treatment method incorporates aqueous slurry of activated carbon and ash. Process eliminates smell and greatly reduces amounts of solids requiring disposal. Solids consist only of sterile ash
Process for purification of waste water produced by a Kraft process pulp and paper mill
The water from paper and pulp wastes obtained from a mill using the Kraft process is purified by precipitating lignins and lignin derivatives from the waste stream with quaternary ammonium compounds, removing other impurities by activated carbon produced from the cellulosic components of the water, and then separating the water from the precipitate and solids. The activated carbon also acts as an aid to the separation of the water and solids. If recovery of lignins is also desired, then the precipitate containing the lignins and quaternary ammonium compounds is dissolved in methanol. Upon acidification, the lignin is precipitated from the solution. The methanol and quaternary ammonium compound are recovered for reuse from the remainder
Precursors of the P-star model
The Federal Reserve Board’s P-Star inflation forecasting model predicts changes in inflation from the gap between actual and equilibrium prices. The model has a distinguished history. Quantity theorists from David Hume to Milton Friedman have long used versions of it to explain how money stock changes determine price level changes with a lag.Forecasting ; Inflation (Finance) ; Prices
Cumulative process models from Thorton to Wicksell
An abstract for this article is not availableMonetary theory
Eliminating runaway inflation : lessons from the German hyperinflation
An abstract for this article is not availableMonetary policy ; Money supply ; Inflation (Finance)
Algebraic quantity equations before Fisher and Pigou
Readers of this Review are doubtlessly familiar with the famous equation of exchange, MV=PQ, frequently employed to analyze the price level effects of monetary shocks. One might think the algebraic formulation of the equation is an outgrowth of the 20th century tendency toward mathematical modeling and statistical testing. Indeed, textbooks typically associate the transaction velocity version of the equation with Irving Fisher and the alternative Cambridge cash balance version with A. C. Pigou, two early 20th century proponents of the application of mathematics to economic analysis. The equation, however, is considerably older, as Thomas M. Humphrey demonstrates in “Algebraic Quantity Equations Before Fisher and Pigou.” Humphrey traces the origins and prehistory of the equation in both its variants, showing that Fisher and Pigou were the inheritors of a long tradition. In fact, by 1900 the equation of exchange was over 120 years old and at least nineteen writers in five countries had presented versions of the equation. Certain versions were even more intricate than the equations of Fisher and Pigou. As early as 1771, writers had produced formulas showing that excessive growth of the money stock causes inflation.Price levels ; Money
Some current controversies in the theory of inflation
An abstract for this article is not available.Inflation (Finance)
Ricardo versus Wicksell on job losses and technological change
Employment (Economic theory) ; Technology
Knut Wicksell and Gustav Cassel on the cumulative process and the price-stabilizing policy rule
Monetary theory ; Money
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