Anything written by Burton G. Malkiel is worth reading twice.
Showing posts with label investment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label investment. Show all posts
Saturday, January 26, 2019
Sunday, December 2, 2018
Tuesday, October 2, 2018
New article from Econ Journal Watch: And the IMF Said, Let There Be Data, and There Was Data: Private Capital Stocks in the Eastern Bloc
From two graduates of the Suffolk University PhD program in Economics I had the pleasure of knowing and working with over the years. Here's Ryan Murphy and Colin O'Reilly's new paper.
And the IMF Said, Let There Be Data, and There Was Data: Private Capital Stocks in the Eastern Bloc
Abstract
The International Monetary Fund has recently published a dataset on public and private capital stocks for 170 countries from 1960–2015 using the perpetual inventory methodology. Following a reckless assumption, opaquely imposed, the dataset likely overstates levels of private investment as a percentage of total investment in former Eastern bloc countries, and thereby likely overstates their private capital stocks. This comment explores the nature and implications of the assumption, and suggests that, in light of the problem, the scope of the IMF project be significantly diminished to address the issue.
Read more here (PDF).
Hat tip to MarginalRevolution.com.
And the IMF Said, Let There Be Data, and There Was Data: Private Capital Stocks in the Eastern Bloc
Abstract
The International Monetary Fund has recently published a dataset on public and private capital stocks for 170 countries from 1960–2015 using the perpetual inventory methodology. Following a reckless assumption, opaquely imposed, the dataset likely overstates levels of private investment as a percentage of total investment in former Eastern bloc countries, and thereby likely overstates their private capital stocks. This comment explores the nature and implications of the assumption, and suggests that, in light of the problem, the scope of the IMF project be significantly diminished to address the issue.
Read more here (PDF).
Hat tip to MarginalRevolution.com.
Saturday, April 1, 2017
Revised Gross Domestic Product 4th Quarter 2016: 2.1$
Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 2.1 percent in the fourth and final quarter of 2016. This latest report is the third estimate of U.S. GDP from the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Real GDP for 2016 grew at a 1.6 percent.
Here is my commentary on yesterday's report.
Here is my commentary on yesterday's report.
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