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1by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty Research Institute (RFE/RL Research Institute)
Published 1957-08-07T00:00:00Z-1957-08-07T23:59:59ZTEXT -
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4by Byun, Young-hwan“…I argue that secular-right governments have facilitated income polarization by undermining centralized wage-bargaining and social-insurance benefit generosity. …”
Published 2018
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5“…It explores trends in automation and points to sluggish job creation caused partly by increasing automation, and argues that secular stagnation in the digital age can only be avoided by a shift towards inclusive growth. …”
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6“…We show that there has been a secular increase in the 90-50 wage differential in the US and the UK since the late 1970s. …”
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7“…We find that there is a secular trend towards increased synchronization for much of the twentieth century and that it occurs across diverse exchange rate regimes. …”
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8Published 2018“…The Political Economy of Structural Reforms in Europe brings together theoretical and empirical studies that address the potential role of structural reforms in restoring macroeconomic stability, resuming economic growth, addressing income inequality, and grappling secular stagnation. It throws new light on the determinants and effects of structural reforms and on how these shape the European integration experience…”
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9by Jimeno, Juan F.“…In this paper I develop an OLG model, one earlier used by Eggertsson and Mehrotra (2014) to rationalize the "secular stagnation hypothesis", to show how high debt, and low population and productivity growth may condition the macroeconomic performance of some European countries over the medium and long-run."…”
Published 2015
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10“…The aggregate German economy is characterized by a secular decline of manufacturing and a rise of modern service industries. …”
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11by Streeck, Wolfgang“…Growth is giving way to secular stagnation; inequality is leading to instability; and confidence in the capitalist money economy has all but evaporated. …”
Published 2016
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12by Fall, Falilou, Bloch, Debra, Hoeller, Peter, Pareliussen, Jon Kristian, Pisu, Mauro“…At the same time, ageing and other secular trends raise long-term sustainability issues. …”
Published 2014
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13“…We decompose changes in outcomes into a secular trend and a business cycle component. We find significantly larger unemployment responses to economic shocks for low-skilled workers relative to high-skilled workers and for immigrants relative to natives within the same skill group. …”
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14“…Second, the paper links the liberalization of industrial relations to "secular stagnation" – i.e., to the growing difficulty that all advanced economies have in generating adequate levels of aggregate demand. …”
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15Published 1998“…Part 2: This program traces the growth of Russian architecture from the Eastern-inspired onion domes and tent roofs of the early wooden churches to the sprawling palaces and vertical spires of secular St. Petersburg. Viewers visit baroque palaces such as Peterhof, with fountains and classical statuary that echo the elegant parks of Italy and France; Rastrelli’s famed Winter Palace in St. …”
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16by Appelius, Mario, 1892-1946“…In June 1937, when Franco occupied Bilbao by force of arms, he suppressed the unjust secular privilege by proclaiming the equality of all the regions of Spain vis-a-vis the Public Treasury. …”
Published 20 June 1939
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17Published 2009“…Verzio FF Submission Duration: 00:30:00 Following the assassination of the Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh in 2004, the film features inspiring conversations with diverse Muslim youth in the Netherlands and showing what it means to be a faith community in an absolutely secular context, how the religious identities of young Muslims are under scrutiny, what it means to be a Muslim woman choosing to wear a headscarf in Europe, and, more than anything else, what is missing in the dialogue. …”
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18by Longkeng Ngouana, Constant“…Finally, I perform a set of counterfactual analyzes in which the reallocation of labor across sectors is constrained endogenously. I find that the secular shift of labor towards the service sector was volatility-reducing in OECD countries during 1970–2006."…”
Published 2013
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19“…"The global financial crisis and the ensuing Great Recession raised concerns about adjustment fatigue, deflation, currency wars, and secular stagnation that presented a sense of déjà vu: similar concerns had arisen at the time of the Great Depression and at the end of World War II. …”
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20“…Beginning with the 1960s the secular process of catching-up set in. Most extra-European cultures started also industrialisation and increased their income. …”
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