Business Economics ®- January 2002
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Front Matter Masthead,
Board of Editors, From the Editor
(PDF, 47 K) |
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Richard B. Berner
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Corporate Profits: Critical for Business Analysis -and not
just for Wall Street
The role of profits and return on investment need increasing attention
from business and financial economists in order to analyze income
through stock prices; identify potentials for mis-pricing stocks;
and to understand prospects for investment, hiring, and pricing.
The analysis of corporate profits must take account of finan-cial
and operating leverage and global influences. Operating leverage,
in particular, has played a particularly damaging role in the 2001
recession, as firms became more capital-intensive. Finally, given
the importance of profits in macroanalysis, it is critical that
the quality and relevance of government statistics be continually
upgraded.
(PDF, 47K)
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Anthony M. Santomero
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What Monetary Policy Can and Cannot Do: It can do a lot,
but its important to know its limits.
There is general agreement that price stability is necessary for
macroeconomic success and that only monetary policy can achieve
price stability. The Fed has been successful in this respect over
the past twenty-two years. However, there is disagreement on whether
monetary policy can do more. Future potential is limited by both
the quality of data and the state of economic science. However,
past success has created the irony that—while there is recognition
that monetary policy is a blunt instrument—there are calls for the
Fed to use it with surgical precision. A realistic appraisal of
the potential for monetary policy suggests that persistent, incremental
action—rather than aggressive attempts at fine-tuning—is the right
direction for achieving an environment for maximum sustainable economic
growth.
(PDF, 61K)
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Michael D. Bordo
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Globalization in Historical Perspective: Our era is not as
unique as we may think, and current trends are not irreversible
Globalization, in the sense of increased integration of international
markets, has waxed and waned throughout history. Most recently,
it thrived between the middle of the nineteenth century and World
War I, languished and retreated until about 1970, and has thrived
again since then. What have we learned from this experience? In
eras of increasing globalization, technological change and reduction
of barriers increased trade and caused international price convergence.
In general, as barriers to trade diminished, so did barriers to
international migration, leading to an increasingly integrated global
market for skilled labor. Integration of capital markets corresponded
in time with trade and migration, with flows increasing, decreasing
and increasing again. However, the charac-teristics of modern capital
flows are significantly different from previous eras of globalization.
In general, it appears that countries that take advantage of free
movement of goods and services, labor and capital can thrive in
the aggregate. However, sound macroeconomic policies are necessary.
Although the number of individual gainers appears to outnumber losers
in increased globalization, it is possibile that the losers can
create a backlash that will once again cause a retreat.
(PDF, 65 K)
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Kevin J Stiroh
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Information Technology and the U.S. Productivity Revival:
A Review of the Evidence. The closer one looks, the more persuasive
it is.
Aggregate, industry, and firm level studies all point to a strong
connection between information technology (IT) and the U.S. productivity
revival in the late 1990s. At the aggregate level, growth accounting
studies show a large and growing contribution to productivity growth
from both the production and the use of IT. At the industry level,
industries that produce or use IT most intensively have shown the
largest increases in productivity growth after 1995. At the firm
level, IT-intensive firms show bet-ter performance than their peers,
and several specific case studies show how IT improves real business
practices. This accumulation of evidence from a variety of studies
suggests a real productivity impact from IT.
(PDF, 66K)
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Eric W. Ford
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Economic Implications of Defined Contribution Health Plans:
Their impact on employers, insurers, employees, and healthcare providers.
Employee health benefits are a major payroll expense for companies
that provide them. During the 1980s and 90s, many employers moved
workers into managed care programs to control costs. However, the
ability of those mechanisms to contain healthcare inflation has
run its course. Significant rate hikes in 2002 will cause some large
employers to increase employee contributions anywhere from thirteen
to twenty percent. Further, new legislation threatens to increase
the pace of healthcare infla-tion and possibly make employers liable
for the plans they offer. Therefore, some firms have already turned
to Defined Contribution Health Plans (DCHPS) to control health benefit
costs and limit their legal exposure. This paper describes two types
of DCHPs that have emerged and analyzes their impact on employers,
insurers, employees, and healthcare providers. The first type, based
on individual Medical Savings Accounts (MSAs) plus group-based catastrophic
health insurance, may be work-able if forthcoming legislation provides
appropriate tax shelter treatment for both employers and employees.
The second type, which involves straightforward voucher payments,
is unlikely to work because it removes all vestiges of community
rating and would therefore leave many classes of workers unable
to obtain affordable health coverage.
(PDF, 42 K)
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Lewis L Smith
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Economies and Markets as Complex Systems: Looking at them
this way may provide fresh insights.
Conventional economic theory follows a mathematical paradigm pioneered
by classical physics, embodying smooth, differentiable functions,
and dominant equilibria. The real business environment, however,
is not so neat; and conventional ways of representing it have severe
shortcomings. Complexity theory has important potential for shedding
additional light on the behavior of the economy, particularly when
impacted by sudden events. This paper outlines basic principles
of complexity theory and indicates how they are relevant to the
practice of economics in business.
(PDF, 66 K)
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Focus on Industries and Markets
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Michael A Deneen and Andrew C Gross
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The Global Commercial Refrigeration Equipment Market.
World demand for commercial refrigeration equipment is projected
to increase at 6.2 percent per year between 1999 and 2004, compared
to a 5.6 percent annual growth during the 1994-1999 period. Total
shipments in 2004 will be valued at $25.1 billion. North America
should continue to account for thirty percent and Europe for about
twenty-five percent of shipments. But growth will be much faster
in developing countries, especially in China with its vast popula-tion
and its rising consumption of frozen food. Parts and components
will continue to account for over one-third of all shipments, followed
by reach-in and walk-in units with over one-fourth of all shipments.
Other major product categories are display cases, vending machines
and ice-making units. Major end-users include food processors, retail
grocers, and supermarkets and various eating/ drinking establishments,
such as restaurants and taverns. The five key producers globally
accounted for only twenty-four percent of shipments in 1999. Accordingly,
there are opportu-nities for other firms. However, many cooperative
ventures and mergers are also under way in the industry.
(PDF, 44 K)
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Forum on Emerging Issues
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Perry D. Quick and Mary T Goldschmid
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FASB Statements 141/142 and the Business Economist
Where, oh where, have my intangibles gone?
Although business economists seldom involve themselves in accounting
details, recent changes in accounting rules provide fertile ground
for economists to make productive use of their analytical skills
in the valuation of intangible assets. Choices of what to report
and how to value intangibles have important strategic as well as
financial reporting implications. Helping management “get it right”
can be an important role for the application of economics in business.
(PDF, 23 K)
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Focus on Statistics
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Robert P Parker
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Statistical Reports from the Social Security Administration
(PDF, 17 K)
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Book Reviews
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Edmund Mennis
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E. Philip Davis and Benn Steil. Institutional Investors. MIT
Press, 2001.
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Phillip Caruso and Virginia Paganelli Caruso
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Ross B. Emmett, editor. Great Bubbles. Pickering & Chatto
Limited.
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(PDF 25K )
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Order these books at the NABE Bookstore
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