By: Globalization and Monetary Policy Institute
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
By: Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas - Globalization and Monetary Policy Institute
This paper tests whether the proposition that globalization has led to greater sensitivity of domestic inflation to the global output gap (the "global output gap hypothesis") holds for the euro area. The empirical analysis uses...
By: Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Economic Letter
By: Matteo Ciccarelli Benoît Mojon - Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
This paper shows that inflation in industrialized countries is largely a global phenomenon. First, the inflation rates of 22 OECD countries have a common factor that alone accounts for nearly 70 percent of their variance. This...
By: Editor, Global Investment Watch
This is the first in a series of posts in which we discuss business risk around the world. Our focus is on those countries that we have identified as having the greatest human rights, governance and economic problems. From this,...
By: Working Knowledge, Harvard Business School
The movement of business activity from developed economies to developing economies—commonly called offshoring—has become the focus of heated debates. Behind these debates lies a pivotal question of scale: How much business...
By: Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
July 2008
By: Globalization and Monetary Policy Institute Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
The current international situation is best characterized as slow economic
growth and higher inflation among the advanced economies and steady growth with higher inflation among the emerging market economies.
By: U.S. Treasury Department
Washington, DC--The following fact sheets were released at the conclusion of meeting of the U.S. – China Strategic Economic Dialogue, June 18, 2008
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