Empirical Methodology in Macroeconomics: Explaining the Success of Friedman and Schwartz’s A Monetary History of the United States - Miron - 1994 () Citation Context ...ecially the Great Depression of 1929-33.sIn addition, institutional evidence identified independent sources of monetary changes ...
it is quite likely that there are many, many people out there that now have a better understanding of what people may be going through, and question themselves before making flippant, off the cuff comments to people dealing with depression. ...
aexplaining how the U.S. Housing Act of 1937, which created the federal public housing program, created programs designed to construct and manage housing projects in order to provide homes but also in major part to help the country come out of the Great Depression by creating new construction...
Intuitively, when the market fell dramatically, as it did during the Great Depression and the 2008 financial crisis, the effect from the market factor dominates that of investment-specific technology shocks, generating a negative risk premium for the spread portfolio. Consistent with this argument, ...
Miron, J. (1994) Empirical Methodology in Macroeconomics Explaining the Success of Fried- man and Schwartz's `A Monetary History of the United States, 1867 - 1960'. Jour- nal of Monetary Economics 34, pp. 17 - 25.Miron, Jeffrey A. 1994. "Empirical Methodology in Macroeconomics: Explaining...
Health education is considered the first and most important component of primary health care. Perhaps there has never been a time to facilitate behavioral changes to such an extent as there is now, because of the great demand for health education. Health education, as the most pivotal step to...
Wall Street On Parade has been repeatedly asking for an explanation as to what has happened to the balance of $340 billion that Congress intended to be used to help American families and businesses during the worst economic downturn since the Great...
This paper describes the monetary policy response of countries during the inter-war period. How did central banks react to the Great Depression? How did countries balance the externals demands of the gold standard with domestic policy pressures? What was the optimal level of international policy coo...
In this Financial Sense podcast, Cris Sheridan and I discuss all aspects of the US-China Trade War, including why it could be a turning point in history, one that not only stops China’s rise, but also sinks the entire world into a new Great Depression. ...
Research suggests that untreated ADHD often leads to higher risk of divorce, joblessness, incarceration, depression, substance abuse, suicide, and accidental death. “People blame themselves, wondering, ‘What’s wrong with me? I must be dumb. I’m never going to make it.’ That’s when you...