Results 211 to 220 of about 172,325 (255)
Social Exclusion and Online Aggressive Behavior: Mediation Through Ego Depletion and Moderation Through Mindfulness. [PDF]
Zhao J, Chen SS, Wei H, Hu Y.
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Toward building deliberative digital media: from subversion to consensus. [PDF]
Pentland A, Tsai L.
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Oil and the Great Moderation [PDF]
We assess the extent to which the greater US macroeconomic stability since the mid-1980s can be accounted for by changes in oil shocks and the oil elasticity of gross output. We estimate a DSGE model and perform counterfactual simulations. We nest two popular explanations for the Great Moderation: smaller (non-oil\link real shocks and better monetary ...
Anton Nakov, Andrea Pescatori
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The Varieties of Great Moderation Experience [PDF]
Two generally accepted regularities about US employment in the Great Moderation are the decline in the procyclicality of labor productivity and the increase in the volatility of labor relative to output. We test these stylized facts for robustness to statistical methodology and find the decline in procyclicality is fragile.
Benjamin S. Kay, Thomas Daula
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The Myth of Financial Innovation and the Great Moderation
The Economic Journal, 2010Financial innovation is widely believed to be at least partly responsible for the recent financialcrisis. At the same time, there are empirical and theoretical arguments that support the view thatchanges in financial markets, in particular, innovations in consumer credit and home mortgages,played a role in the great moderation.
den Haan, W.J., Sterk, V.
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What's so great about the Great Moderation?
Journal of Macroeconomics, 2017Abstract This paper examines how volatilities of output growth and inflation have changed over a long period for eight countries. We obtain a number of robust empirical results based on a variety of different econometric methods. The lowest volatility occurs during or shortly after the Great Moderation period.
John W. Keating, Victor J. Valcarcel
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