18 research outputs found

    Letter from [John Daniel] Runkle to John Muir, 1871 Nov 7

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    New York, Nov 7, 1871 My dear Sir: I have delayed a decision concerning your articles on Yosemite because it was useless to attempt to do anything with them until after the election. Mind now that we shall have to condense them sharply in order to make them available but in the condensed form they seem more desirable. Unless I hear from you to the contrary we shall make that [ ] of them, and pay of course for what we use. Very truly yours, J Whitland Runkl

    Letter from [John Daniel] Runkle to John Muir, 1871 Nov 7

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    New York, Nov 7, 1871 My dear Sir: I have delayed a decision concerning your articles on Yosemite because it was useless to attempt to do anything with them until after the election. Mind now that we shall have to condense them sharply in order to make them available but in the condensed form they seem more desirable. Unless I hear from you to the contrary we shall make that [ ] of them, and pay of course for what we use. Very truly yours, J Whitland Runklehttps://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmcl/43807/thumbnail.jp

    Letter from [John Daniel] Runkle to John Muir, 1871 Nov 7

    Get PDF
    New York, Nov 7, 1871 My dear Sir: I have delayed a decision concerning your articles on Yosemite because it was useless to attempt to do anything with them until after the election. Mind now that we shall have to condense them sharply in order to make them available but in the condensed form they seem more desirable. Unless I hear from you to the contrary we shall make that [ ] of them, and pay of course for what we use. Very truly yours, J Whitland Runklehttps://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmcl/43807/thumbnail.jp

    "The Russian System of Shop-work Instruction for Engineers and Machinists" report by President John B. Runkle to the MIT Corporation. Boston, Press of A.A. Kingman., 1876

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    For more information about this item, visit https://archivesspace.mit.edu/repositories/2/archival_objects/14884

    Correspondence, 1869 January to 1869 May

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    For more information about this item, visit https://archivesspace.mit.edu/repositories/2/archival_objects/14881

    Capital Controls and the International Transmission of U.S. Money Shocks

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    We assess whether capital controls effectively insulate countries from U.S. monetary shocks, examining a large range of country experiences in a unified estimation framework. We estimate the effect of identified U.S. monetary shocks on the exchange rate and foreign country interest rates, and test whether countries with less open capital accounts exhibit systematically smaller responses. We find essentially no evidence of this. Other country factors such as the exchange rate regime or degree of dollarization explain more of the cross-country differences in responses. The significant differences in responses we do find are more pronounced at short horizons. Copyright 2007 The Ohio State University.
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