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Duncan Innes

'Matters Could Escalate' : Economist Raghuram Rajan Warns of Currency Conflict - SPIEGE... - 0 views

  • I think this has to do with more than just currencies. It is very convenient for industrial countries to point to currency intervention as the problem, because they are not directly guilty of that. Is it any surprise that China resists an international agreement where the sole focus will be exchange rates? But industrial countries are not beyond reproach on the kind of policies they have been following in recent years. Let us remember where this crisis originated ...
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    Fascinating discussion on whether the race to low interest rates (and export lead growth) is the only problem in the world macro economy
Duncan Innes

Kraft to shed 200 British jobs but denies breaching no-cuts pledge to MPs | Business | ... - 0 views

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    Hard HR, Strikes, Takeover Trouble at Cadbury Kraft
Duncan Innes

Macroeconomics - Theories of Economic Growth - 1 views

  • The annual growth of productivity in the British economy increased by only 0.8% in 2005 the slowest growth since the recession year of 1990. There are many reasons for this sluggish growth of productivity. Part of the reason was the slowdown in growth in 2005 because output and output per worker tend to be positively correlated. In an economy where demand and output is weaker, people in work are not being used as intensively compared to when the economy is stronger. Deeper-rooted explanations for weak productivity performance focus on supply-side deficiencies. These include the effects of skills gaps in industry; and the transfer of the economy's resources into the public sector where productivity is lower. Other factors contributing to sluggish productivity growth include the effects of business red tape and a persistently low rate of spending on research and development.Low productivity growth means that little progress has been made in reducing the productivity gap that exists between the UK and most of her major competitors.
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    How economies grow. Analysis of supply side factors: Output per worker, the movement of services to the the less efficient public sector, skills gap, red tape, low spending on R&D, quality and quantity of labour supply, low productivity growth in workforce, innovation 
Duncan Innes

BBC News - Brazil reduces poverty but industry feels the strain - 1 views

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    Fantastic case study on the Macro Economic environment of Brazil
Duncan Innes

FT.com / Companies / Industrial Goods - India blocks Chinese power groups - 1 views

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    India v China using protectionism in the form of subsidies to win the the power war.
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