Search Results | Showing 1351 - 1360 of 9301 results for "Economics" |
| | | ... of wireless sensing for condition monitoring and predictive maintenance but, in many environments, the logistics and economics of battery-powered sensors have not made sense." "Everactive opens up a range of possibilities for truly maintenance-free sensing ... |
| | | | ... the 'Taylor Rule' prescribe? For quick reference, here's Wikipedia's definition (yes, yes I know): "In economics, a Taylor rule is a monetary-policy rule that stipulates how much the central bank should change the nominal interest rate ... |
| | | | ... normalisation to whoops, we've gotten ahead of ourselves - would be an interesting case study for each and every student of economics and finance. To be sure, the Fed's pause, forward-guided in the first quarter of this year, would have just ... |
| | | | ... For the 45 to 55 age group the mortgage debt-to-income ratio went from 82% to 169%. The research was co-authored by economics professor Rachel Ong from Curtin University and professor of housing and housing studies Gavin Wood from RMIT. Wood explained ... |
| | | | ... same rationale central banks' spit out when raising interest rates). We heard this song before. Deloitte Access Economics director Chris Richardson echoes the familiar refrain, saying: "A cut now could weaken our ability to fight back against a serious ... |
| | | | ... infrastructure. Asked how the financial services industry was shaping up in the current economic climate, Deloitte Access Economics director Michael Thomas said a key topic for discussion was the ongoing role of superannuation funds in infrastructure. ... |
| | | | ... on February 6; three months before the RBA acknowledged the same in RBA governor Philip Lowe's speech before the Economics Society of Australia on May 21 and later, in the minutes of the RBA's board meeting. I could live with two or three, even ... |
| | | | ... Philip Lowe came around to Financial Standard 's view, admitting as much, when he delivered his address before the Economics Society of Australia on the May 21. "Putting these various elements together, our central scenario - as outlined in our recent ... |
| | | | "If your opponent is temperamental, seek to irritate him. Pretend to be weak, that he may grow arrogant. If he is taking his ease, give him no rest." - Sun Tzu, The Art of War Trump must be fuming and scratching his golden hair. Not that China retaliated ... |
| | | | ... writing: "Imposing tariffs on all U.S/China trade would reduce global gross domestic product by 0.5% by 2020, Oxford Economics chief U.S. economist Gregory Daco said in a research note Thursday, adding: "if the bilateral tensions spiral into a full-blown ... |
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