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... Given the widespread recognition of the benefits of price stability, it is important that everyone, and young people in particular, understands the importance of price stability, how it can best be achieved, and how maintaining stable prices supports the broader economic goals of the European Union. ...
Demand Characteristics for Imported Cod Products in
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... participant in all cod markets. Table 2 reports for selected years the quantity and real value share of Chinese exports of frozen, salted & dried and salted cod to Portugal. Notice that in 2005 China was a very minor player in all three product forms but by 2013 China had captured over 10% of the sa ...
Chapter 9
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... shocks that raised prices and lowered output, including spikes in oil prices. • Increases in oil prices shift the aggregate supply curve. However, they also have an adverse effect on aggregate demand. • Because the United States is a net importer of foreign oil, an increase in oil prices is just lik ...
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... costs resulting from excess capacity abroad may also be offset by movements in the dollar. Finally, even if changes in foreign prices or the value of the dollar did affect import prices, this change in import prices may have little indirect effect on U.S. goods prices. U.S. and foreign goods may be ...
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quarterly journal of economics
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Chapter 7: Putting All Markets Together: The AS
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Chapter 4: Commodity Price Swings and Commodity Exporters
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... between different goods - for example, an apple and a computer. The reason is that there is less differential in the characteristics of goods from different origins than in those of different goods. Though, some goods produced in Country A may have better quality than the same goods produced in Coun ...
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...  Famous critique of classical theory: The long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run, we are all dead. Economists set themselves too easy, too useless a task if in tempestuous seasons they can only tell us when the storm is long past, the ocean will be flat. AGGREGATE DEMAND ...
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...  Famous critique of classical theory: The long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run, we are all dead. Economists set themselves too easy, too useless a task if in tempestuous seasons they can only tell us when the storm is long past, the ocean will be flat. AGGREGATE DEMAND ...
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...  Famous critique of classical theory: The long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run, we are all dead. Economists set themselves too easy, too useless a task if in tempestuous seasons they can only tell us when the storm is long past, the ocean will be flat. AGGREGATE DEMAND ...
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Abstract for AEA Meetings 1997 - American Economic Association
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... supply. This model can be used to explain real domestic output and the level of prices at any point in time and to understand what causes output and the price level to change. The aggregate demand (AD) curve is downsloping. Changes in the price level have an inverse effect on the level of spending b ...
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2000s commodities boom



The 2000s commodities boom or the commodities super cycle was the rise in many physical commodity prices (such as those of food stuffs, oil, metals, chemicals, fuels and the like) which occurred during the decade of the 2000s (2000–2009), following the Great Commodities Depression of the 1980s and 1990s. The boom was largely due to the rising demand from emerging markets such as the BRIC countries, as well as the result of concerns over long-term supply availability. There was a sharp down-turn in prices during 2008 and early 2009 as a result of the credit crunch and sovereign debt crisis, but prices began to rise as demand recovered from late 2009 to mid-2010. Oil began to slip downwards after mid-2010, but peaked at $101.80 on 30 and 31 January 2011, as then Egyptian political crisis and rioting broke out, leading to concerns over both the safe use of the Suez Canal and over all security in Arabia itself. On 3 March, Libya's National Oil Corp said that output had halved due to the departure of foreign workers. As this happened, Brent Crude surged to a new high of above $116.00 a barrel as supply disruptions and potential for more unrest in the Middle East and North Africa continued to worry investors. Thus the price of oil kept rising into the 2010s. The commodities super-cycle peaked in 2011, ""driven by a combination of strong demand from emerging nations and low supply growth."" Prior to 2002, only 5 to 10 per cent of trading in the commodities market was attributable to investors. Since 2002 ""30 per cent of trading is attributable to investors in the commodities market"" which ""has caused higher price volatility.""
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