Results 101 to 110 of about 7,176,704 (213)

Current Account Reversals: Always a Problem? [PDF]

open access: yes
Using panel data and case studies, we analyze the pre-1970 history of international capital flows and current account reversals. Considering a sample of emerging markets and advanced economies with per capita GDPs at least 60 per cent those of the lead ...
Barry Eichengreen, Muge Adalet
core  

Current account sustainibility [PDF]

open access: yes, 2003
Mancellari, Ahmet, Xhepa, Selami
core  

Current Account Deficits: The Australian Debate [PDF]

open access: yes
This paper documents the clear change of view, which has taken place in Australia over the past three decades or so, concerning the relevance of the current account deficit for policy.
Christopher Kent   +2 more
core  

Current Account Composition and Sustainability of External Debt [PDF]

open access: yes
If an economy runs a current account (CA) deficit and finances it via a corresponding net inflow of equity capital the external debt (ED) does not change, i.e.: the CA deficit does not add to ED. This is no paradox. It simply comes from the definition of
Gianpaolo Rossini, Paolo Zanghieri
core  

FINANCIAL AND CURRENT ACCOUNT INTERRELATIONSHIP: AN EMPIRICAL TEST [PDF]

open access: yes
Theoretically, financial account (FA) serves as a means of financing deficit in a country’s current account (CA). With the outburst of the rapid globalization and the liberalization of the capital markets, the function of FA could be a major cause of CA ...
Evan LAU, Nelson FU
core  

Best practices from the Association of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine Program Directors for social media use with emphasis on virtual recruitment. [PDF]

open access: yesATS Sch
Greco AA   +6 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Financial globalization and the U.S. current account deficit [PDF]

open access: yes
Despite heavy borrowing in recent years, the United States has financed its large current account deficits without experiencing an unusual buildup in foreign investors' holdings of U.S. assets.
Matthew Higgins, Thomas Klitgaard
core   +1 more source

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