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The ILO and the Economic Depression
1971In 1929 American prosperity, which had seemed to all to be on the way to becoming a permanent feature of national life, crumbled with disastrous international repercussions. During the first part of the year the prices of stocks had soared to fantastic levels, but in October the market broke and the wild rush to buy was replaced by an equally wild rush
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The Economic Burden of Treatment-Resistant Depression
Clinical Therapeutics, 2013Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a leading cause of disability, morbidity, and mortality worldwide. The lifetime prevalence in the United States is estimated at 17%. Treatment-resistant depression (TRD) is generally defined as failure to achieve remissions despite adequate treatment.
Marilyn Halseth+6 more
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Uncertainty Aversion and Economic Depressions
Challenge, 2009The noted jurist argues that during times of economic downturns, the aversion to uncertainty of consumers and business people rises. This is a notion embedded, he argues, in the thinking of both John Maynard Keynes and Frank Knight. One conclusion is that government stimulus is necessary in such periods, like the current one, to reduce the fear of ...
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Economic Depression of the Renaissance?. III
The Economic History Review, 1964erhaps the most serious criticism which Professor Cipolla has levelled against our statistical apparatus lies in his notion of the 'increased demand for metallic money', by which he seems to mean that the commodity price of bullion rose, or, more simply, that prices fell. The evidence does suggest an increase in the purchasing power of gold and silver,
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The Economic Significance of the Depression in Britain
Journal of Contemporary History, 1969The depression in Britain between I929 and I932 was not an economic watershed. The main economic trends of the UK economy in the I930s did not move in a direction different from the previous decade, though in some respects the pace of readjustment quickened. Some of the economic policies adopted after the depression were dissimilar to those followed in
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The Economic Depression and Sickness
Journal of the American Statistical Association, 1934Selwyn D. Collins, G. St. J. Perrott
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The Economic Impact of Depression in the Workplace
2019There is international recognition of the high prevalence of depression and its associated disability. In countries where workers have been studied, major depressive disorders are the most prevalent chronic conditions in the prior year. Economic costs of depression include the costs related to screening, treatment, maintenance, and support of persons ...
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The Impact of the Depression on Economic Thought
1982The aim of this paper is to integrate the well-known changes in economics during the Depression into a longer history of economic thought. This will require looking at Keynesian theory from a somewhat unusual viewpoint. It will require looking at Keynes’s psychology rather than his economics.
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