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Christopher P

Fed's Rosengren: Government Fiscal Policy Big Drag on Economy - 0 views

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    This article discusses the delicate balance between fiscal and monetary policy. The president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, Eric Rosengren, blames inefficient fiscal policy on the little-effect monetary policy is having on the economy. He argues that tight fiscal policy, or contractionary strategies, are making it more difficult for the Federal Reserve to lower the unemployment rate. However, it is important to understand that monetary or fiscal policy is not better than the other. Instead, it is likely to take a combination of strategies to combat problems in the economy.
Nehir D

India's exports to grow by 7.2% in 2014 fiscal: Morgan Stanley - 0 views

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    The article is talking about India's exports which are expected to grow by 7.2 per cent in 2014 fiscal on the back of improvement in growth of developed markets, says a report by Morgan Stanley Research. "We expect export growth of 7.2 per cent in fiscal year 2014 versus minus one per cent in fiscal 2013," it said in a report on Asia Pacific Economics.Morgan Stanley Research expects a gradual sequential recovery in India's exports on the back of improvement in developed markets growth from the third.
Nehir D

Gold prices continue to crash: No need for Indian investors to worry? - 0 views

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    The article is talking about India is projected to grow by 6 per cent in the current fiscal while growth is expected to be steady in most of the Asia Pacific economies.It, however, cautioned that a weaker global risk appetite and a poor monsoon would pull down growth to around 5 per cent in 2013-14 fiscal. In India, poor monsoon seasons would pull growth down to around 5 per cent in 2013 and would reach 6.5 per cent.India's growth forecast has been lowered to 6 per cent in 2013 and 6.7 per cent in 2014 on weaker consumption and exports.
Xinmian H

Laura D'Andrea Tyson: The Sequester and Fiscal Policy - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • sequester. It is the wrong medicine for what ails the economy now and the wrong cure for its future budgetary challenges.
  • deep and lingering deficiency in aggregate demand
  • The gap between the actual and potential level of output means about $900 billion of forgone goods and services this year alone. This tremendous waste of productive potential is reflected in an unemployment rate of 7.9 percent,
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • The economy needs less rather than more deficit reduction in the near term.
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    The article is talking about the economy of US right now. The aggregate demand is far lower than potential and government is cutting expenditure rapidly. However, the author thought that's not the right way of doing it. Although the money is short, government is still supposed to take necessary actions to induce recovery.
Adil R

Proactive push - Economic Times - 0 views

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    This article refers to aggregate demand in 2010 and it states that India's fiscal and monetary policies had saved India from slipping onto another recession. Firstly the article states that India relies heavily on domestic demand because it cannot heavily rely on export and therefore they needed the measures to increase aggregate demand. This increase in aggregate demand, even though it has not been mentioned, can be assumed to shift the demand curve to the right and therefore more real output is demanded at every price level.
anonymous

King Says Debate on U.K.'s Fiscal Policy Has Become 'Overblown' - 0 views

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    Mervyn King, the governor of the Bank of England, said that the economy should be left alone in order for the "automatic stabilizers to work." He said that the "government's plan to aid home buyers shouldn't become permanent."
Nehir D

Choose growth over exchange rate - 0 views

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    The areticle is about the Reserve Bank of India stopped listening to lullabies of praise on its exemplary handling of monetary and exchange rate policies. The current policy keeps piling up useless reserves, offers wholly avoidable arbitrage opportunities to patriotic residents and even more patriotic non-residents, hikes interest rates, depresses growth and widens the fiscal deficit. People are raising dollar debt and not bothering to cover forward. They are confident that the rupee would either appreciate against the dollar or at least hold steady till repayment time.When dollars come into India, they have to be converted into rupees. This conversion bloats our forex reserves and injects rupees into the system. If all the rupees created as a result of dollar inflows were to be allowed to add to the money supply, that would reduce interest rates and also create the potential for inflation. So the RBI sterilises such rupee injections by selling government bonds and mopping up rupees from the system. The increased supply of government bonds brings down their price, hiking the yield. Thus, sterilisation pushes up interest rates.
Nehir D

The Rut We Can't Get Out Of - 0 views

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    The article is talking about the federal government which has shut down today because of an impasse over the budge and in two weeks, the nation is set to hit its borrowing limit.The major problem in the articles is that there is an oversupply of global labor, an oversupply of global productive capacity and an oversupply of global capital. The jobs created low wages and part time. Growth in domestic manufacturing is still slow which will prevent the development of a country in their own production and prevent the large amount of profit they will get as a result of the domestic production.Business spending has fallen, rents of the houses falling where home prices have increased. The reason why its hard to get out from the rut is because they are no longer faced with a world in which supply-side economic remedies, easy money, reduced taxation, fiscal belt-tightening and deregulation can spur new capacity and the creation of well-paying private sector jobs.Countries that were recently poor find themselves with huge surpluses and sovereign wealth funds. The rich countries of the world, while still rich, struggle with monumental levels of debt, both private and public, and unsettling questions about whether they can compete globally.Also to clear this mess,developed nations need to put the huge surplus of underemployed workers back to work by any means, including big public sector investments to improve infrastructure and competitiveness.Moreover, a new economic multilateral ism with the developing world, to encourage them to re balance their economics away from savings and toward consumption, while we in the West must curb our addiction to credit and consumption is necessary.
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