Results 271 to 280 of about 54,223 (298)
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The Alternative to Stagnation

Monthly Review, 1986
In his column in The Nation of May 10th, Alexander Cockburn, perhaps the U.S. left's most effective journalist/polemicist, writes: The success of the Reagan administration so far as news management is concerned—news management being its central preoccupation—is its conditioning of the media to "see" and not to see.
Paul M. Sweezy, Harry Magdoff
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Stagnation Theory and Stagnation Policy

1990
Following the traditions of Kalecki and Keynes, we are led to believe that a high long-term rate of growth is necessary to establish an adequate use of capacity and full employment, because somehow our economy is rather inflexibly adjusted to such high long-term rates of growth.
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The Logic of Stagnation

Monthly Review, 1986
In the "Afterword to the Second German Edition" of Das Kapital Marx called attention to an aspect of the history of economic thought in the nineteenth century which, though in an entirely different context, has had a striking analogue in our time.
Harry Magdoff, Paul M. Sweezy
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Innovate or Stagnate?

Journal AWWA, 2005
In his column, AWWA Executive Director Jack Hoffbuhr describes how change, or innovation, is rapidly becoming the normal mode of operation for most organizations. He describes the innovative organization as having characteristics that include communicating the vision of an innovative culture, developing people, championing cross‐functional teams, and ...
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Stability and Stagnation

2015
On the fourth of July, 1776, thirteen American colonies declared their independence from Great Britain, and formed the United States of America, thereby laying the foundations for the now oldest surviving political system with representative government.
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The Dynamics of Stagnation

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2014
This paper analyzes periods of economic stagnation in a panel of countries. We test whether stagnation can be predicted by institutional characteristics and political shocks, and compare the impacts of such variables with those of traditional macroeconomic variables. We examine the determinants of stagnation episodes using dynamic linear and non-linear
Adam Szirmai   +3 more
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Globalization and Stagnation

Monthly Review, 1994
It is relatively clear that globalization, the international spread of capitalist exchange and production relationships, is a very destructive and painful process. The implementation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) will provide some very stark examples over the next several years.
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Stagnation analysis of DGMRES

Applied Mathematics and Computation, 2004
The authors study the following problem: The class of problems for which the DGMRES algorithm, when started with the initial guess \(x^{(0)} = 0\) and using exact arithmetic, computes \(m\) iterates \(x^{(1)}=\ldots=x^{(m)}=0\) without making any progress at all. Problems of dimension two and index one are solved explicitly.
Yimin Wei, Jieyong Zhou
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Inflation and Stagnation in Brazil

Economic Development and Cultural Change, 1971
The perplexing thing about the Brazilian economic situation in the 1960s was the simultaneous presence of inflation and relative stagnation. Over the four years 1963-66, the annual industrial growth rate fell from the 9.8 percent of the previous decade to 3 percent. Yet prices more than quadrupled during the period despite a variety of antiinflationary
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The Market Stagnates

1994
The theory of macroeconomic policy may have begun with Keynes and his followers but its development into a rigorous body of thought owes much to the synthesising of Keynes’s theory into a form that was readily understood by those with a Classical background.
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