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Economic Outlook, 1988
In the first half of this year the current account deficit widened sharply to £5.6bn, well above the Chancellor's full‐year Budget forecast of £4bn and our own most recent forecast of £5bn. In this Forecast Release, we show that imports have continued to grow very rapidly but export growth has slowed down. This is in contrast to 1987 when exports were
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In the first half of this year the current account deficit widened sharply to £5.6bn, well above the Chancellor's full‐year Budget forecast of £4bn and our own most recent forecast of £5bn. In this Forecast Release, we show that imports have continued to grow very rapidly but export growth has slowed down. This is in contrast to 1987 when exports were
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Tariffs, Investment and the Current Account
International Economic Review, 1991A dynamic specific-factors model with adjustment costs of investment is used to study the impact of tariffs on the current account. A permanent increase in tariffs generates a current account deficit, as the import-competing sector spreads the increase of the capital stock over time. A temporary increase in tariffs has ambiguous effects.
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Deregulation and the current account [PDF]
This paper studies how removing barriers to competition in the nontraded goods sector affects the current account, the real exchange rate, and factor prices in a small open economy. We show that the expansion of the nontraded sector that results from a deregulation shock is associated with an accumulation of foreign assets unless production of ...
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Accounting for US current account deficits: an empirical investigation
Applied Economics, 1997The sources of US current account deficits are investigated using a number of macroeconomic variables and a vector error correction model. The variables are those typically emphasized by the traditional income - expenditure approach and the intertemporal (Ricardian) approach. The results indicate that macroeconomic variables explain the current account
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ACCOUNTING FOR CURRENT DEPRECIATION.
The Accounting Review, 1930Abstract Depreciation may be defined as that inevitable disappearance of the value of certain items of physical property which can normally be expected in the course of the conduct of business enterprises. The reason why the unit is no longer of value to the owner may be actual physical deterioration, or it may be that changes in ...
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1991
As a result of the withdrawal of SSAP 16 there is now an almost universal lack of interest in it as far as accounting practice is concerned.
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As a result of the withdrawal of SSAP 16 there is now an almost universal lack of interest in it as far as accounting practice is concerned.
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Managerial Finance, 1976
In July 1973 the UK government announced that a special committee of enquiry was to be set up “to consider whether, and if so how, company accounts should allow for changes in costs and prices, having regard to established accounting conventions based on historic costs, the proposal for current general purchasing power accounting put forward by the ...
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In July 1973 the UK government announced that a special committee of enquiry was to be set up “to consider whether, and if so how, company accounts should allow for changes in costs and prices, having regard to established accounting conventions based on historic costs, the proposal for current general purchasing power accounting put forward by the ...
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Trending Current Accounts [PDF]
Trending current accounts pose a challenge for intertemporal open-economy macro models. This paper shows that a two-country representative-agent business cycle model is able to explain the historical time-paths of the US and Japanese current accounts, both of which display trends but in opposite directions.
Horag Choi, Nelson C. Mark
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New Zealand Economic Papers, 1991
Net external liabilities, particularly net foreign debt, have grown rapidly in both New Zealand and Australia during the 1980s. Some have argued that in the absence of distortions or externalities, continued capital account surpluses are benign since they reflect a willingness by foreigners to finance expenditures by domestic residents.
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Net external liabilities, particularly net foreign debt, have grown rapidly in both New Zealand and Australia during the 1980s. Some have argued that in the absence of distortions or externalities, continued capital account surpluses are benign since they reflect a willingness by foreigners to finance expenditures by domestic residents.
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The Accounting Review, 1950
Abstract The article focuses on the current accounting problems in the U.S. Most of the current problems arise in the appraising of transactions reflecting new methods of doing business or matters upon which there has been a wide difference of opinion among recognized accounting authorities for many years.
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Abstract The article focuses on the current accounting problems in the U.S. Most of the current problems arise in the appraising of transactions reflecting new methods of doing business or matters upon which there has been a wide difference of opinion among recognized accounting authorities for many years.
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