Wednesday, November 20, 2024
From The Statesman:
“Lamenting the fact that the global growth rate at just over 3 per cent is the lowest since the turn of the century when an average of nearly 4 per cent prevailed till COVID pandemic, the G20 Troika of Brazil, India and South Africa on Wednesday observed that accelerating progress towards sustainable development goals (SDGs) requires inclusive digital transformation.
”Technology (also) is moving at dizzying pace, and if equitably deployed, affords us a historic opportunity to raise growth, reduce inequality and take one giant step towards bridging the gap in attaining the SDGs, three countries said in a joint communique, endorsed by several G20 countries, guest countries and international organisations which participated in the G20 Summit in Brazil.”
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From The Statesman:
“Lamenting the fact that the global growth rate at just over 3 per cent is the lowest since the turn of the century when an average of nearly 4 per cent prevailed till COVID pandemic, the G20 Troika of Brazil, India and South Africa on Wednesday observed that accelerating progress towards sustainable development goals (SDGs) requires inclusive digital transformation.
”Technology (also) is moving at dizzying pace,
Posted by 8:15 PM
atLabels: Inclusive Growth
For conference proceedings of the international scientific conference KNOWCON 2020, click here.
For conference proceedings of the international scientific conference KNOWCON 2020, click here.
Posted by 8:14 PM
atLabels: Inclusive Growth
On Housing Cycles & Housing Affordability
On Housing Supply
Housing Wealth and Mortgages
On Environment and Housing
Spatial Economics
Insurance and Bargaining
Discrimination
Miscellaneous
Note that this post will be updated as links to papers and presentations become available. Last updated: 11:/20/2024
On Housing Cycles & Housing Affordability
Posted by 8:34 AM
atLabels: Global Housing Watch
Monday, November 18, 2024
From a paper by Cintia Darma Yenti, Nathasya , Akmal Yusuf , and Erni Febrina Harahap:
“This research aims to analyze the factors that influence income inequality in West Sumatra Province. Some of the variables that are taken into consideration are: unemployment, education and poverty. The research uses secondary data from the Central Statistics Agency (BPS), using panel data regression analysis in 19 Regencies/Cities in West Sumatra Province, during 2017-2023. The selected research model uses the Fixed Effect Model (FEM). The research results show that: (1) the unemployment variable has a positive and insignificant effect on income inequality, (2) the education variable has a negative and significant effect on income inequality, (3) the poverty variable has a positive and significant effect on income inequality.”
From a paper by Cintia Darma Yenti, Nathasya , Akmal Yusuf , and Erni Febrina Harahap:
“This research aims to analyze the factors that influence income inequality in West Sumatra Province. Some of the variables that are taken into consideration are: unemployment, education and poverty. The research uses secondary data from the Central Statistics Agency (BPS), using panel data regression analysis in 19 Regencies/Cities in West Sumatra Province, during 2017-2023. The selected research model uses the Fixed Effect Model (FEM).
Posted by 2:00 PM
atLabels: Inclusive Growth
From a paper by Sunil Sharma:
“Despite over a decade of reforms, financial systems remain fragile, and with the ongoing degradation of the biosphere addressing these fragilities is becoming even more challenging. The green digital transition requires innovation and experimentation. Laws and rules must support competition for novel technologies and solutions, allow for failure, and facilitate re-allocation of labor, real assets, and capital. Hence, the case for robust banks, nonbank financial intermediaries, and market infrastructure is even more urgent and compelling.
Complexity and deep uncertainty characterize the green digital transition and the operation of economic systems. Taking this seriously means recognizing that simpler heuristic approaches may dominate complicated optimization strategies. We must be cognizant of what we know, what we can know over relevant time horizons, and what may be unknowable.
Given the weaknesses of the current approach to financial regulation and oversight, changes in institutional and financial structure should be considered that would reduce the use of “runnable” short-term debt, create more transparency and better incentives for all players, and hence lessen the need for complicated rules, explicit and implicit State guarantees, and interventions in markets.
In an era of chronic and acute disruptions, durable price and financial stability will require not just accounting for financial hazards, but also engaging in promoting a structural transition. With time running out and the world approaching critical ecological thresholds, central banks and financial regulators will have to integrate environmental considerations into their operations and policies and collaborate more closely with other government agencies.
To increase the systemic resilience of the financial sector, the policy essay argues for:
(i) simplicity in prudential rules; (ii) higher buffers in financial institutions; (iii) greater modularity in the structure of the financial system; (iv) better use of market forces and public discipline; and (v) more credible and effective supervision.”
From a paper by Sunil Sharma:
“Despite over a decade of reforms, financial systems remain fragile, and with the ongoing degradation of the biosphere addressing these fragilities is becoming even more challenging. The green digital transition requires innovation and experimentation. Laws and rules must support competition for novel technologies and solutions, allow for failure, and facilitate re-allocation of labor, real assets, and capital. Hence, the case for robust banks, nonbank financial intermediaries,
Posted by 1:59 PM
atLabels: Energy & Climate Change
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