Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Clinical trials (1)
- Economic indicators (1)
- FOMC (1)
- Inflation (1)
- Investigators (1)
-
- LSAP (1)
- Large-scale asset purchases (1)
- Monetary policy (1)
- Money supply (1)
- Operation twist (1)
- Pharmaceutical (1)
- Profit (1)
- QE1 (1)
- QE2 (1)
- QE3 (1)
- Quantitative easing (1)
- Selection bias (1)
- Stimulus (1)
- Term Structure of Interest Rates (1)
- The Fed (1)
- The Federal Open Market Committee (1)
- The Federal Reserve (1)
- Treasury yields (1)
- Yield curve (1)
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Business
Critical Analysis Of The Confounding Of Clinical Trials, Eleanor L. Jordan
Critical Analysis Of The Confounding Of Clinical Trials, Eleanor L. Jordan
Senior Honors Projects, 2010-2019
To provide a comprehensive overview of issues confounding clinical trials, Chapter 2 will discuss the parties involved in the research and development of medications and detail the individual responsibilities of each. However, the ambition of these individual entities often produces a conflict of interest especially when profits are involved [9]. Organizations and individuals such as insurance corporations, pharmaceutical companies (sponsors), pharmacy benefit managers, investigators (doctors/medical professionals) and most importantly patients, are all involved in carrying out clinical research and have definitive responsibilities they are required to follow for unbiased results. However, many rules are overlooked and biases go unrecorded causing …
The Effects Of Quantitative Easing In The United States: Implications For Future Central Bank Policy Makers, Matthew Q. Rubino
The Effects Of Quantitative Easing In The United States: Implications For Future Central Bank Policy Makers, Matthew Q. Rubino
Senior Honors Projects, 2010-2019
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the effects of the Federal Reserve’s recent bond buying programs, specifically Quantitative Easing 1, Quantitative Easing 2, Operation Twist (or the Fed’s Maturity Extension Program), and Quantitative Easing 3. In this study, I provide a picture of the economic landscape leading up to the deployment of the programs, an overview of quantitative easing including each program’s respective objectives, and how and why the Fed decided to implement the programs. Using empirical analysis, I measure each program’s effectiveness by applying four models including a yield curve model, an inflation model, a money supply …