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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Julieta Fischer

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India Report: Kerala high on unemployment at 9.9% | Deccan Chronicle - 0 views

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    Unemployment is the condition of someone of working age (16-64) who is willing and able to work, actively seeking employment, but unable to find a job. The unemployment rate is the percentage of the total force in a nation that is unemployed. This article lists unemployment rates in various states of India, compares unemployment rates in rural and urban areas and also provides unemployment of women compared to men. The differences are extreme. India had a nation-wide unemployment rate of 3.8% (for June 2012) while the rate is as high as 17.9% in Goa. The lowest unemployment rate is in Gujarat at 1%. There are also large differences between male and female unemployment in India. While male unemployment stands at 2.9% female is at 6.9%. If we focus on a specific state in India, the female unemployment rate was highest in Goa at 46.2%. The unemployment rate is also very different between rural and urban areas. The article only provides figures for females. 28% of females were unemployed in rural areas compared to 17.9% in urban areas on a national level. The highest female unemployment rate in urban areas is in Sikkim at 51.1%. - Julieta Fischer
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Two Ways to See China's Problems - Economic View - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    China faces some serious economic problems. One main problem is that China seems to be suffering from excess capacity resulting from an overinvestment in factories, retail stores or infrastructure which leads to an imbalanced supply and aggregate demand relation. Aggregate demand is the total demand for a nation's goods and services from domestic households, firms, the government and foreigners. The article reveals two different approaches to evaluating China's economy: the Keynesian theory and the Austrian school theory. The Keynesians argue that aggregate demand drives stability and that governments can and should help in difficult times. The Chinese government has the tools to increase aggregate demand as it could for example "adjust interest rates and bank reserve requirements, instruct state-owned banks to maintain lending", deploy foreign exchange reserves, or initiate construction and infrastructure projects. On the other hand, the Austrian school of economics believes that it is hard for the government to invest money wisely, particularly in China, where there seems to be an environment of "economic favoritism". The Keynesians may believe that China will be able to manage its overcapacity; however, the Austrian theory argues that the Chinese government will distort resource allocation and further limit aggregate demand. - Julieta Fischer
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