Much of the strength in Asia comes from fast-growing domestic demand, the economists argue.
But the economists argue that people whose income is temporarily low perhaps because they have taken time out to study often borrow and therefore consume more than their immediate income would allow.
ECONOMIST: A new report lays out a blueprint for the ideal tax system
In a new National Bureau of Economic Research paper, the three economists argue that earlier analyses overstate the wealth effect because they do not account for the fact that people who expect to earn more in the future may bid up house prices.
The economists sometimes argue that geography came to a halt way back because the mathematical tools of the day were not up to the job.
In fact, so ingrained is the aversion to inflation, that some economists argue that the credibility of central bankers is the problem.
No matter, argue the economists: far better to have undistorted consumption choices and to fulfil the government's redistributive aims more efficiently through the income-tax system.
ECONOMIST: A new report lays out a blueprint for the ideal tax system
Many economists in the region argue for a more flexible currency system, starting with a Kuwait-style currency basket, so interest rates can reflect the realities of a region with a very different economy from America's.
Many economists argue that the impact of the crisis could be mitigated by stimulating domestic consumption.
ECONOMIST: The government��s plans are still something of a mystery
Some economists argue that the pattern actually benefits both the US and China.
Economists argue over the sums (see article), but broadly agree that greenhouse-gas emissions can be curbed without flattening the world economy.
Some economists argue that the bank made a rod for its own back in the way it chose to define price stability.
Left-leaning economists argue that the solution to this problem is simple: the Fred should import extra shipments of canned food during hurricane season.
Though other economists argue about the conclusions of Auerback, it is interesting to note that in 1936, the path to austerity was widely accepted.
FORBES: The Week Ahead: Austerity Didn't Work in '37...What About Now?
By manipulating their production levels, he and other economists argue, the Saudis have ensured that firms in rich countries have had strong disincentives against holding stocks.
Keynesian economists argue that the correct policy response is to boost government spending (G) through fiscal stimulus, allowing consumers and businesses time to adjust and recover, and to gradually remove that stimulus as the economy returns to its normal growth trajectory.
Economists argue about the disincentive effects of higher tax rates. (Messrs Piketty and Saez, the economists who have transformed analysis of income concentration at the top, reckon, controversially, that the optimal top income-tax rate could be as high as 80%.) But no one doubts that there are trade-offs.
Thus, enough economists argue that the times of full employment are gone in the western world forever , or better, that the natural rate from the 3-4% which were traditionally called full employment rose significantly to the maybe 8-10% we used to see over the last years and decades.
The above is notable given all the talk from mercantilist economists of the Peter Morici variety who continue to argue that Greece should leave the euro.
FORBES: Message To Greece: To Leave The Euro Isn't To Leave The Euro
Most economists argue, on the contrary, that German wage costs are still too high and contribute to unemployment.
The economists' testimony was used to argue that Proposition 8 hurts not only gay couples and their children, but the economy and government coffers, too.
Why are some folks able to make huge returns in the stock market, if as economists argue there is no systematic way to make above average returns?
Economists continue to argue that the bank could do more to inject monetary stimulus into an economy which is only now emerging from its third recession in a decade.
But some economists argue that Brazil is the beneficiary of a structural shift, in which the industrialisation of Asia and the rise of a new middle class in the developing world will keep commodity prices high.
In a report for Rio Tinto and the Australian National University, Ross Garnaut and Ligang Song, two economists, argue that by 2020 China's demand for metals may increase by the equivalent of the industrial world's annual total demand now.
In their 2008 book, The Race Between Education and Technology, Harvard economists Claudia Goldin and Laurence Katz argue that technological advancement was a major spur to educational attainment for the U.S., at least until the 1970s, and that this symbiotic relationship laid the grounds for almost a century of American prosperity and relative economic equality.
Other economists are coming out of the woodwork to argue for an increase in the debt limit.
FORBES: Deja Vu, But No Disaster: U.S. Government Hits Debt Ceiling
Some economists argue that a shortfall in the legal protection granted to innovators means there is not enough innovation.
It is common for economists and neoliberals to argue for the use of relatively unrestricted vouchers in lieu of in-kind or highly circumscribed welfare payments.
Many economists argue, however, that if the deficit is to be tackled, the best hope lies on the revenue side.
ECONOMIST: Too little investment; too big a deficit; too few jobs
应用推荐