Principles of macroeconomics:
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
<<[S.l.]>>
South-Western Cengage Learning
2013
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Ausgabe: | 9. ed., internat. ed. |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXX, 497 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. |
ISBN: | 9781111970192 111197019X |
Internformat
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020 | |a 9781111970192 |9 978-1-111-97019-2 | ||
020 | |a 111197019X |9 1-111-97019-X | ||
035 | |a (OCoLC)820373830 | ||
035 | |a (DE-599)BVBBV040264674 | ||
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100 | 1 | |a Melvin, Michael |d 1948- |e Verfasser |0 (DE-588)124046193 |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Principles of macroeconomics |c Michael Melvin ; William Boyes |
250 | |a 9. ed., internat. ed. | ||
264 | 1 | |a <<[S.l.]>> |b South-Western Cengage Learning |c 2013 | |
300 | |a XXX, 497 S. |b Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
700 | 1 | |a Boyes, William J. |e Verfasser |0 (DE-588)128647353 |4 aut | |
856 | 4 | 2 | |m HBZ Datenaustausch |q application/pdf |u http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=025120379&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |3 Inhaltsverzeichnis |
999 | |a oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-025120379 |
Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804149266707382272 |
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adam_text | Titel: Principles of macroeconomics
Autor: Melvin, Michael
Jahr: 2013
Part One Summary 20
Key Terms 20
INTRODUCTION TO
Exercises 20
THE PRICE SYSTEM
Preface xxii
CHAPTER 1 Specialization 22
Economics: The World around You 1
CHAPTER 2
Choice, Opportunity Costs, and
, Why Study Economics? 2
l.a. The Value of a Degree 3 l.b.l. Points Inside the Production Possibilities Curve 25
Opportunity Costs 23
l.a. Trade-offs 23
Lb. The Production Possibilities Curve 23
1 .b. What Is Economics? 3
l.b.2. Points Outside the Production Possibilities
Curve 25
l.b.3. Shifts of the Production Possibilities Curve 25
The Definition of Economics 4
2.a. Scarcity 4
2.a.l. Free Goods, Economic Bads, and Resources 4 2. Specialization and Trade 27
2.a. Marginal Cost 27
2.b. Specialize Where Opportunity Costs Are Lowest 28
2.b.l. Trade 28
I.e. Comparative Advantage 29
3.a. Positive and Normative Analysis 6 2.d. Private Property Rights 31
2.b. Choices 5
2.c. Rational Self-interest 5
3. The Economic Approach 6
3.b. Common Mistakes 6
3.c. Microeconomics and Macroeconomics
Summary 32
Key Terms 33
Summary 8 exercises 33
Key Terms 8 Economic Insight A Tricky Question on
Exemses 8 Opportunity Costs 24
Economically Speaking Women Still Lag Behind Economic Insight Comparative Advantage 30
Men in Pay 10 Economic Insight The Importance of Private
APPENDIX TO CHAPTER 1 Property Rights 32
Workinq With Graphs 12 Economically Speaking Flat Owners Take to Barricades
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- as Chavez Seizes Private Assets 35
1. Reading Graphs 12 CHAPTER 3
l.a. Relationships between Variables 12
Lb. Independent and Dependent Variables 14
I.e. Direct and Inverse Relationships 14
Markets, Demand and Supply, and the
Price System 37
Constructing a Graph 15 1. Allocation Systems 39
2.a. The Axes 15 la fairness 39
2.b. Constructing a Graph from a Table 16 1.b incentives 40
2.c. Interpreting Points on a Graph 17 lc The Market Process: Arbitrage 41
2.d. Shifts of Curves 17
2. Markets and Money 43
2.a. Barter and Money Exchanges 43
3.a. Positive and Negative Slopes 18
Demand 44 2. The Private Sector 75
3.a. The Law of Demand 44 2.a. Households 75
3.b. The Demand Schedule 45 2.b. Business Firms 76
3.c. The Demand Curve 46 2.c. The International Sector 78
3.d. From Individual Demand Curves to a Market
Curve 47
3. The Public Sector 83
3.e. Changes in Demand and Changes in Quantity 3.a. Growth of Government 83
Demanded 47 3.b. Government Spending 84
4. Linking the Sectors 86
3.e.l. Income 49
3.e.2. Tastes 49
3.e.3. Prices of Related Goods and Services 50 4.a. Households and the Rest of the Economy 86
3.e.4. Expectations 51 4.b. Government 87
3.e.5. Number of Buyers 51 4.c. The International Sector 87
Summary 89
4. Supply 51 Key Terms 89
4.a. The Law of Supply 51 Exercises 90
4.b. The Supply Schedule and Supply Curve 52 Economic Insight The Successful Entrepreneur 79
4.c. From Individual Supply Curves to the Economically Speaking Impact of Bailouts 91
Market Supply 53
4.d. Changes in Supply and Changes in Pcirt TWO
Quantity Supplied 53
4.d.l. Prices of Resources 53 MACROECONOMIC BASICS
4.d.2. Technology and Productivity 53
4.d.3. Expectations of Suppliers 56 CHAPTER 5
4.d.4. Number of Suppliers 56 National Income Accounting 93
4.d.5. Prices of Related Goods or Services 56 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. Equilibrium: Putting Demand and Supply 1. Measures of Output and Income 94
Together 57 l.a. Gross Domestic Product 94
5.a. Determination of Equilibrium 57 1.a.1. GDP as Output 98
5.b. Changes in the Equilibrium Price: Demand Shifts 59 l.a.2. GDP as Expenditures 99
5.c. Changes in the Equilibrium Price: Supply Shifts 60 l.a.3. GDP as Income 99
5.d. Market Adjustment and Market Interference 61 1.b. Other Measures of Output and Income 101
5.d.l. Market Interference: Price Ceilings and Price l.b.l. Gross National Product 101
Floors 61 1.b.2. Net National Product 101
5.e. Market Adjustment: Watch the Price of Eggs 63 l.b.3. National Income 102
Summary 65 Lb.4. Personal Income 102
Key Terms 66 l.b.5. Disposable Personal Income 103
Exercises 66
Economically Speaking The Wrong Answer for 2. Nominal and Real Measures 103
High Gas Prices 68 2.a. Nominal and Real GDP 103
2.b. Price Indexes 104
CHAPTER 4 2.b.1 Base Tear 105
The Market System and the Private and 2.b.2 Types of Price indexes 106
Public Sectors 70________________________ 3- Flows of income and Expenditures 108
Summary 109
1. The Market System 71 Key Terms 110
l.a. Consumer Sovereignty 71 Exercises 110
Lb. Profit and the Allocation of Resources 72 Economic Insight The Consumer Price Index 107
I.e. Creative Destruction 72 Economically Speaking Hiding in the Shadows: The Growth
l.d. The Determination of Income 74 of the Underground Economy 112
The Aggregate Demand Curve 160
CHAPTER 6 CHAPTER 8
An Introduction to the Foreign Macroeconomic Equilibrium: Aggregate
Exchange Market and the Balance of Demand and Supply 154
Payments 114
1. Aggregate Demand, Aggregate Supply, and
1. The Foreign Exchange Market 115 Business Cycles 155
l.a. Exchange Rates 115 l.a. Aggregate Demand and Business Cycles 155
Lb. Exchange Rate Changes and International 1.b. Aggregate Supply and Business Cycles 156
Trade 118 l-c- ALookAhead 157
2. The Balance of Payments 120 2. Factors That Influence Aggregate Demand 158
2.a. Accounting for International Transactions 120 2.a. Consumption 158
2.b. Balance of Payments Accounts 121 2.b. Investment 159
2.c. The Current Account and the Financial Account 122 2.c. Government Spending 159
Summary 124 2.d. Net Exports 159
Key Terms 125 2.e. Aggregate Expenditures 160
Exercises 125
Global Business Insight Active Trading Around the
World 117 3.a. Why the Aggregate Demand Curve Slopes
Global Business Insight The Euro 119 Downward 160
Economically Speaking French Cross Channel to Buy Chanel 3.a.l. The Wealth Effect 161
in London 126 3.a.2. The Interest Rate Effect 162
3.a.3. The International Trade Effect 162
CHAPTER 7 3.a.4. The Sum of the Price-Level Effects 162
Unemployment and Inflation 128 3 b Changes in Assresate Demand NonPrice
________.------------------------------------------------------------------------- Determinants 163
3.b.l. Expectations 164
1. Business Cycles 129 3.b.2. Foreign Income and Price Levels 166
l.a. Definitions 129 3.b.3. Government Policy 166
Lb. Historical Record 130
I.e. Indicators 132 4. Aggregate Supply 167
4.a. Why the Aggregate Supply Curve Slopes Upward 167
2. Unemployment 133 4.b. Short-Run versus Long-Run Aggregate Supply 167
2.a. Definition and Measurement 134 4.y.i, Short-Run Aggregate Supply Curve 166
2.b. Interpreting the Unemployment Rate 134 4.b.2. Long-Run Aggregate Supply Curve 166
2.c. Types of Unemployment 135 4,c. Changes in Aggregate Supply: Nonprice
2.d. Costs of Unemployment 136 Determinants 170
2.e. The Record of Unemployment 138 4.C.I. Resource Prices 171
4.C.2. Technology 172
3. Inflation 142 4.c.3 Expectations 172
3.a. Absolute versus Relative Price Changes 142 4,c,4. Economic Growth: Long-Run Aggregate Supply
3.b. Effects of Inflation 143 shifts 174
3.c. Types of Inflation 146
3d. The Inflationary Record 147 5. Aggregate Demand and Supply Equilibrium 175
Summary 149 5.a. Short-Run Equilibrium 175
Key Terms 150 5.b. Long-Run Equilibrium 176
Exercises 150 Summary 176
Global Business Insight High Unemployment in Key Terms 177
Europe 141 Exercises 177
Economically Speaking Older Workers and the Economic Insight How Lack of Information in the Short Run
Recession 152 Affects Wages in the Long Run 170
Global Business Insight Oil and Aggregate Supply 173 CHAPTER 10
Economically Speaking The Conference Board Consumer Income and Expenditures Equilibrium 212
Confidence Index Plummets Further in February 179
CHAPTER 9
1. Equilibrium Income and Expenditures 213
l.a. Expenditures and Income 213
Aggregate Expenditures 181 Lb. Leakages and Injections 216
2. Changes in Equilibrium Income and
1. Consumption and Savmg 182 Expenditures 219
l.a. Saving and Savings 183
Lb. The Consumption and Saving Functions 183
I.e. Marginal Propensity to Consume and Save 186
l.d. Average Propensity to Consume and Save 189
I.e. Determinants of Consumption 190
l.e.l. Disposable Income 190
l.e.2. Wealth 190
l.e.3. Expectations 192 Demand 227
I.e.4. Demographics 192
2.a. The Spending Multiplier 219
2.b. The Spending Multiplier and Equilibrium 221
2.c. Real-World Complications 223
2.C.I. Foreign Repercussions of Domestic Imports 224
2.C.2. Multiplier Estimates 226
3. Aggregate Expenditures and Aggregate
Investment 194
2.a. Autonomous Investment 194
2.b. Determinants of Investment 194
2.b.l. The Interest Rate 195
2.b.2. Profit Expectations 196
2.b.3. Other Determinants of Investment 196
3.a. Aggregate Expenditures and Changing Price
Levels 227
3.b. Deriving the Aggregate Demand Curve 227
3.c. A Fixed-Price AD-AS Model 229
Summary 230
Key Terms 231
Exercises 231
Economic Insight John Maynard Keynes 214
Economic Insight The Paradox of Thrift 217
3 Government Spending 199 Economically Speaking Results: North Americans Are Better
Off after 14 Years of NAFTA 232
4. Net Exports 199
4 a. Exports 200 APPENDIX TO CHAPTER 10
4.b. Imports 200
4.c. The Net Export Function 201
An Algebraic Model of Income and
Expenditures Equilibrium 234
Part Three
5. The Aggregate Expenditures Function 202
5.a. Aggregate Expenditures Table and Function 202
5.b. The Next Step 202
Summary 204
Key Terms 205 MACR0EC0N0MIC POLICY
Exercises 205
Economic Insight Permanent Income, Life Cycles, and Chapter 11
Consumption 193
Economically Speaking 2009 Trade Gap Is $380.7 FlSCal Policy 236________________________
Billion 207
1. Fiscal Policy and Aggregate Demand 238
APPENDIX TO CHAPTER 9 l.a. Shifting the Aggregate Demand Curve 238
An Algebraic Model of Aggregate
Lb. Multiplier Effects 238
I.e. Government Spending Financed by Tax Increases 240
expenditures 209__________________________ 1.d Government Spending Financed by Borrowing 241
I.e. Crowding Out 242
2. Fiscal Policy in the United States 243 2.c.2. International Banking Facilities 272
2.a. The Historical Record 243 2.d. Informal Financial Markets in Developing
2.b. Deficits and the National Debt 245 Countries 273
2.b.l. Deficits, Interest Rates, and Investment 248 3. Banks and the Money Supply 274
2.b.2. Deficits and International Trade 248
2.b.3. Interest Payments on the National Debt 248 3.a. Deposits and Loans 274
2.c. Automatic Stabilizers 249 3b- DePosit Expansion Multiplier 276
Summary 278
3. Fiscal Policy in Different Countries 250 Key Terms 279
3.a. Government Spending 250 Exercises 279
3 b Taxation 252 Global Business Insight Islamic Banking 270
Summary 254 Economically Speaking International Demand for
Key Terms 255 the Dollar 281
CHAPTER 13
Exercises 255
Economic Insight Supply-Side Economics and the Laffer
Curve 241 Monetary Policy 284
Economic Insight The Taxpayer s Federal Government Credit
Card Statement 244 1. The Federal Reserve System 285
Global Business Insight Value-Added Tax 254
1.a. Structure of the Fed 285
Economically Speaking Agreement Reached on Euro Pact: 1. a.1. Board of Governors 285
EU President 257
l.a.2. District Banks 285
l.a.3. The Federal Open Market Committee 286
APPENDIX TO CHAPTER 11 Lb_ Functions of the Fed 287
l.b.l. Banking Services and Supervision 287
l.b.2. Controlling the Money Supply 287
An Algebraic Examination of the
Balanced-Budget Change in Fiscal
Policy 259 2. Implementing Monetary Policy 290
2.a. Policy Goals 290
CHAPTER 12 2.a.l. Intermediate Targets 290
Money and Banking 261
2.a.2. Inflation Targeting 291
2.b. Operating Procedures 292
2.b.l. Tools of Monetary Policy 294
1. What Is Money? 262 2.b.2. FOMC Directives 298
l.a. Functions of Money 262 2.c. Foreign Exchange Market Intervention 299
l.a.1. Medium of Exchange 262 2.C.I. Mechanics of Intervention 299
l.a.2. Unit of Account 263 2.c.2. Effects of Intervention 300
l.a.3. Store of Value 263
l.a.4. Standard of Deferred Payment 263 3- Monetary Policy and Equilibrium Income 301
Lb. The U.S. Money Supply 263 3.a. Money Demand 301
l.b.l. Ml Money Supply 264 3.a.l. The Money Demand Function 302
l.b.2. M2 Money Supply 265 3.a.2. The Money Supply Function 303
I.e. Global Money 266 3.a.3. Equilibrium in the Money Market 303
l.c.l. International Reserve Currencies 267 3.b. Money and Equilibrium Income 306
Summary 307
2. Banking 268 Key Terms 308
2.a. Financial Intermediaries 269 Exercises 308
2.b. U.S. Banking 269 Economic Insight What s on a 20-Dollar Bill? 288
2.b.l. Current Structure 269 Global Business Insight The European Central Bank 291
2.b.2. Bank Failures 270 Economically Speaking Bank of England Maintains Bank
2.c. International Banking 272 Rate at 0.5 Percent and Increases Size of Asset Purchase
2.C.I. Eurocurrency Market 272 Program by £50 Billion to £125 Billion 310
CHAPTER 14 CHAPTER 15
Macroeconomic Policy: Tradeoffs, Macroeconomic Viewpoints: New
Expectations, Credibility, and Sources of Keynesian, Monetarist, and New
Business Cycles 312 Classical 342
1. The Phillips Curve 313 1. Keynesian Economics 343
l.a. An Inflation-Unemployment Tradeoff? 314 1.a. The Keynesian Model 343
1.b. Short-Run versus Long-Run Tradeoffs 314 1.b. The Policymakers Role 344
l.b.l. In the Short Run 316
l.b.2. In the Long Run 316
2. Monetarist Economics 345
2.a. The Monetarist Model 345
2. The Role of Expectations 318 2.b. The Policymakers Role 346
2.a. Expected versus Unexpected Inflation 319
2.a.l. Wage Expectations and Unemployment 319 3- New Classical Economics 347
2.a.2. Inventory Fluctuations and 3.a. The New Classical Model 348
Unemployment 321 3.b. The Policymakers Role 349
2.a.3. Wage Contracts and Unemployment 322
2b. Forming Expectations 323 4. Comparison and Influence 351
2.b.l. Adaptive Expectations 323 Summary 352
2.b.2. Rational Expectations 324 Key Terms 353
Exercises 353
3. Credibility and Time Inconsistency 324 Economic Insight Milton Friedman 346
3.a. The Policymaker s Problem 325 Economically Speaking The Ghosts of Christmas Past Haunt
3.b. Credibility 325 Economists 354
4. Sources of Business Cycles 327 CHAPTER 16
4.a. The Political Business Cycle 327 Economic Growth 356
4.b. Real Business Cycles 330 1. Defining Economic Growth 357
4.c.l. Better Inventory Management 331
4.c.2. Changes in Financial Markets 332 1.a- Real GDP 357
4.c.3. Improved Macroeconomic Policy 332 1.a. 1. Compound Growth 357
4.c.4. Good Luck 332 l.a.2. The Rule of 72 358
Lb. Per Capita Real GDP 359
5. The Link between Monetary and Fiscal I.e. The Problems with Definitions of Growth 359
Policies 333
2. The Determinants of Growth 362
5.a. The Government Budget Constraint 333
5.b. Monetary Reforms 334 2a- Labor 362
Summary 336 2b- CaPital 364
Key Terms 337 2c- Land 364
Exercises 337 2d- Technology 365
Economic Insight The Natural Rate of 3. Productivity 366
Unemployment 318
Economic Insight Why Wages Don t Fall During 3a- Productivity and Economic Growth 366
Recessions 323 3.b. Determinants of Productivity 367
Economically Speaking Testimony of Chairman Ben S. 3.b.l. Labor Quality 367
Bemanke Before the Joint Economic Committee, U.S. 3-b.2- Topological Innovation 369
Congress, Washington, D.C. 339 3.b.3- Other Factors 369
3.c. Growth and Development 372
Summary 372 2. Globalization Controversy 399
Key Terms 373 2.a. Arguments Against Globalization 400
Exercises 373 2.a.l. Fair, Not Free, Trade 400
Economic Insight Technological Advance: The Change in the 2.a.2. International Organizations Serve Only the
Price of Light 365 Interests of Corporations 400
Economically Speaking Riding a Surge of Technology 374 2.a.3. Globalization Occurs at the Cost of Environmental
Quality 400
CHAPTER 17 2.a.4. Globalization Encourages Harmful Labor
Development Economics 376
Practices 401
2.b. Arguments in Favor of Globalization 401
l.b.l. Free Trade Helps Developing Countries 401
1. The Developing World 377
2.b.2. International Organizations Represent
1.a. Measuring Poverty 377 Governments and People 402
1.b. Basic Human Needs 378 2.b.3 The Connection between Globalization and
Environmental Harm Is Weak 402
l.b.4. Does Globalization Encourage Harmful Labor
Practices ? 403
Obstacles to Growth 380
2.a. Political Obstacles 380
2.a.l. Lack of Administrative Skills 380
2.a.2. Political Instability and Risk 381 3. Globalization, Economic Growth, and
2.a.3. Corruption 381 Incomes 404
2.a.4. Good Economics as Bad Politics 382
2.b. Social Obstacles 383
4. Financial Crises and Globalization 406
2.b.l. Lack of Entrepreneurs 384 4.a. Crises of the 1990s 406
2.b.2. Rapid Population Growth 384 4.b. Exchange Rates and Financial Crises 407
4.c. What Caused the Crises? 409
3. Development Strategies 386 4.d. The Global Financial Crisis of 2007-2008 410
3.a. Inward-Oriented Strategies 386 Summary 412
3.b. Outward-Oriented Strategies 386 Key Terms 412
3.c. Comparing Strategies 387 Exercises 413
Global Business Insight The World Trade Organization 401
4. Foreign Investment and Aid 389 Economically Speaking Reshaping the Global Economy 414
4.a. Foreign Savings Flows 389
4.b. Benefits of Foreign Investment 389 PdXX FOUf
4.b.l. New Jobs 389
4.b.2. Technology Transfer 390
4.b.3. Foreign Exchange Earnings 390 FINANCE
4.c. Foreign Aid 390
Summary 392
Key Terms 392
Exercises 392 ________________________________________
Global Business Insight Economic Development in the
Americas 383 I. An Overview of World Trade 418
Economically Speaking Does International Food Aid Harm i a The Direction of Trade 418
the Poor? 394 Lb. What Goods Are Traded? 419
CHAPTER 18 2. An Example of International Trade
Globalization 396 Equilibrium 421
ISSUES IN INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND
CHAPTER 19
World Trade Equilibrium 417
2.a. Comparative Advantage 421
2.b. Terms of Trade 423
2.c. Export Supply and Import Demand 424
1. The Meaning of Globalization 397
l.a. Globalization Is Neither New nor Wic
Lb. The Role of Technological Change
I.e. Measuring Globalization 398 3. Sources of Comparative Advantage 427
l.a. Globalization Is Neither New nor Widespread 397 2.d. The World Equilibrium Price and Quantity Traded 425
1.b. The Role of Technological Change 398
3.a. Productivity Differences 428 CHAPTER 21
Exchange Rates and Financial Links
between Countries 457
3.b. Factor Abundance 428
3.c. Other Theories of Comparative Advantage 428
Summary 432
Key Terms 432
Exercises 432 1. Past and Current Exchange-Rate
Global Business Insight The Dutch Disease 424 Arrangements 458
Economically Speaking Letter to Senate Majority Leader La. The Gold Standard 458
Harry Reid 434 Lb. The Bretton Woods System 459
I.e. The International Monetary Fund and the World
CHAPTER 20 Bank 459
International Trade Restrictions 437 1.d The Transition Years 459
¦--------------------------------------------------------------------------- i.e. Today 460
1. Arguments for Protection 438 2. Fixed or Floating Exchange Rates 464
l.a. Creation of Domestic Jobs 438 2.a. Equilibrium in the Foreign Exchange Market 464
Lb. Creation of a Level Playing Field 440 2.b. Adjustment Mechanisms under Fixed and Flexible
I.e. Government Revenue Creation 441 Exchange Rates 465
l.d. National Defense 441 2.c. Constraints on Economic Policy 467
I.e. Infant Industries 441
l.f. Strategic Trade Policy 442 3. Prices and Exchange Rates 468
3.a. Appreciation and Depreciation 469
2. Tools of Commercial Policy 443 3.b. Purchasing Power Parity 470
2.a. Tariffs 444
2.b. Quotas 445 4. Interest Rates and Exchange Rates 471
2.c. Other Barriers to Trade 447 4.a. The Domestic Currency Return from Foreign
2.c.l. Export Subsidies 447 Bonds 471
2.c.2. Government Procurement 448 4,b. Interest Rate Parity 472
2.C.3. Health and Safety Standards 448 Summary 473
Key Terms 474
3. Preferential Trade Agreements 449
3.a. Free Trade Areas and Customs Unions 449 Global Business Insight The IMF and the World Bank 460
3.b. Trade Creation and Diversion 450 Economically Speaking Frequently Asked Questions: EU
Summary 452 Enlargement and Economic and Monetary Union
Key Terms 452 (EMU) 476
Exercises 452
Global Business Insight Smoot-Hawley Tariff 444 Glossary 479
Economically Speaking USDA Increases FY11 Raw Sugar Index 485
Tariff-Rate Quota, Domestic Sugar Overall Allotment
Quantity and Reassigns Domestic Sugar Allotments and
Allocations 454
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Melvin, Michael 1948- Boyes, William J. |
author_GND | (DE-588)124046193 (DE-588)128647353 |
author_facet | Melvin, Michael 1948- Boyes, William J. |
author_role | aut aut |
author_sort | Melvin, Michael 1948- |
author_variant | m m mm w j b wj wjb |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV040264674 |
classification_rvk | QC 300 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)820373830 (DE-599)BVBBV040264674 |
dewey-full | 339 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 339 - Macroeconomics and related topics |
dewey-raw | 339 |
dewey-search | 339 |
dewey-sort | 3339 |
dewey-tens | 330 - Economics |
discipline | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
edition | 9. ed., internat. ed. |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV040264674 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T00:20:18Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781111970192 111197019X |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-025120379 |
oclc_num | 820373830 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-521 DE-703 DE-M382 |
owner_facet | DE-521 DE-703 DE-M382 |
physical | XXX, 497 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. |
publishDate | 2013 |
publishDateSearch | 2013 |
publishDateSort | 2013 |
publisher | South-Western Cengage Learning |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Melvin, Michael 1948- Verfasser (DE-588)124046193 aut Principles of macroeconomics Michael Melvin ; William Boyes 9. ed., internat. ed. <<[S.l.]>> South-Western Cengage Learning 2013 XXX, 497 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Boyes, William J. Verfasser (DE-588)128647353 aut HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=025120379&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Melvin, Michael 1948- Boyes, William J. Principles of macroeconomics |
title | Principles of macroeconomics |
title_auth | Principles of macroeconomics |
title_exact_search | Principles of macroeconomics |
title_full | Principles of macroeconomics Michael Melvin ; William Boyes |
title_fullStr | Principles of macroeconomics Michael Melvin ; William Boyes |
title_full_unstemmed | Principles of macroeconomics Michael Melvin ; William Boyes |
title_short | Principles of macroeconomics |
title_sort | principles of macroeconomics |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=025120379&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT melvinmichael principlesofmacroeconomics AT boyeswilliamj principlesofmacroeconomics |