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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Economics Versus Politics In Trade Policy, Daron Djerdjian May 2010

Economics Versus Politics In Trade Policy, Daron Djerdjian

Daron Djerdjian

Do economies of scale contribute to our understanding of trade policy or is ideology and inequality sufficient? We develop a unified theoretical framework that encompasses both strategic economic and political variables deemed to be important in explaining trade policy. We predict that an increase in the scale effect leads to restrictive trade policies in labor-abundant countries and liberal trade policies in capital-abundant countries. Using cross-country data on economies of scale, ideology, inequality and various measures of trade barriers we confirm our predictions and establish that a unified framework, which incorporates economies of scale in production, performs better in explaining trade …


Financial Analysis With Microsoft Excel, Todd M. Shank, Timothy R. Mayes Jan 2010

Financial Analysis With Microsoft Excel, Todd M. Shank, Timothy R. Mayes

Faculty Books

FAME explores the use of Excel as THE calculating tool for finance professionals. As students enter College with basic skills for using Excel and other software packages they need for their business courses, the materials they read must be ramped up. The book as it stands covers the main topics that students would see in a typical corporate finance course: financial statements, budgets, TVM, capital budgeting, the Market Security Line, some options materials, pro forma statements, cost of capital, equities, and debt. In the final chapter of this revision, we include a section on how students can build their own …


Shooting On A Moving Target: Explaining European Bank Rates During The Interwar Period, Kirsten Wandschneider Dec 2009

Shooting On A Moving Target: Explaining European Bank Rates During The Interwar Period, Kirsten Wandschneider

Kirsten Wandschneider

This paper describes the monetary policy response of countries during the inter-war period. How did central banks react to the Great Depression? How did countries balance the externals demands of the gold standard with domestic policy pressures? What was the optimal level of international policy coordination? We use weekly data over the period 1925-1936 to estimate central bank rate reaction functions for a panel of 22 countries during the inter-war gold standard. The estimates suggest to us changing objectives for monetary policy. Countries moved away from the sole objective of convertibility and towards a more ‘modern’ monetary policy based on …