The Effects of Foreign-Exchange Intervention
by Kathryn Dominguez and Jeffrey A. Frankel
Does Foreign Exchange Intervention Work?
by Kathryn Dominguez and Jeffrey Frankel
Striking a Balance
For nearly fifty years, Professor Harry Glasbeek has been at the forefront of legal scholars and public intellectuals challenging assumptions and understandings about the injustices embedded in the economic, social, political and legal orders of Western capitalist democracies. His writings and teachings have influenced generations of law students, academics and activists. The Class Politics of Law brings together eleven incisive contributions from pre-eminent scholars across several disciplines...
Markus Eckrich untersucht, ob Clustereffekte in der Softwareindustrie Unternehmen helfen, innovativer und produktiver zu werden. Der Autor führt anhand dieser beiden Wirkungen eine Identifikation und Analyse von Softwareclustern durch und wählt als Indikatoren die Patentdichte und die Arbeitsproduktivität. Neben der wissenschaftlichen Relevanz bietet das Buch auch für Softwareunternehmen (Standortstrategie) und die Politik (Wirtschaftsförderung) interessante Aspekte.
Economic survey of Latin America and the Caribbean 2016
Published since 1948, This is the sixty-eighth edition of the Economic Survey of Latin America and the Caribbean, which corresponds to the year 2016, consists of three parts. Part I outlines the region's economic performance in 2015 and analyses trends in the first half of 2016, as well as the outlook for the rest of the year. It examines the external and internal factors influencing the region's economic performance and highlights some of the macroeconomic policy challenges that have arisen in...
Annual Report of the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific 2011
This is the annual report of the United Nations ESCAP.
Mark Wayne Nelson details the efforts of one of America's most underappreciated public servants. In 1934, Franklin D. Roosevelt invited Marriner S. Eccles, a Mormon from Utah, to join his administration.As a Republican businessman, Eccles seemed an unlikely candidate for the role of leading crusader for a fairer and more economically sound distribution of the nation's wealth. From his first position in the Treasury Department, though, he emerged as the central mover in revolutionizing the mortga...
Protest and the Politics of Blame (Interests, Identities, and Institutions in Comparative Polit)
by Debra Lynn Javeline
Clinton and Blair (Routledge Frontiers of Political Economy)
by Flavio Romano
The former President of the United States, Bill Clinton and, at the time of publication, still current Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Tony Blair have described their style of government as a 'Third Way'. In this important and timely book, Flavio Romano identifies and clarifies the economic implications of this particular approach to public governance. Testing the validity of President Clinton's and Prime Minister Blair's claims of practising a Third Way Romano submits their economic polic...
Growth, Crisis, Democracy (Routledge Research in Comparative Politics)
Since the global financial crisis of 2008, advanced economies have been making various efforts to overcome the economic impasse. While the contrast between the countries that have escaped from the crisis relatively quickly and those still suffering from serious problems is becoming clearer, a new economic crisis stemming from newly emerging economies has again impacted advanced economies. In retrospect, both leftist and rightist governments in advanced economies pursued expansive macroeconomic a...
The Schuman Plan and the British Abdication of Leadership in Europe
by Edmund Dell
This book provides the first detailed examination of the Attlee government's rejection of British participation in the Schuman Plan in 1950, which proposed the establishment of a common market for steel and coal as a way of avoiding future Franco-German conflict. This also represented Britain's rejection of a leading role in fashioning European political and economic intergration. Many received myths are contested: the Schuman Plan was not a bolt from the blue; domestic political circumstances...
Major powers have long sought to pursue their strategic interests in the Gulf region and since the discovery of oil their engagement has increased in significance and intensity. Moreover, international interest in the area has increased substantially since the cataclysmic events of September 11, 2001, and subsequent terrorist attacks attributed to the Al-Qaeda organization and its affiliates. By virtue of their power and influence in world affairs and in international fora, the interests of Russ...
Striking a Balance
Empirical Evidence on the Macroeconomic Effects of EU Cohesion Policy
by Philipp Mohl
Philipp Mohl evaluates the macroeconomic effects of EU Cohesion Policy with the help of empirical methods. His findings indicate that in particular the part of EU Cohesion Policy which is spent for the poorest regions (the so-called Objective 1 funding) has a positive and statistically significant impact on economic growth. Moreover, the employment effects of EU Cohesion Policy seem to be conditional on the educational attainment, i.e., in particular regions with a high share of high-skilled pop...