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Business Economics ®- October 2000
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To download the entire October issue in
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October 2000 Issue (383K)
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Most
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Front Matter -- Masthead,
Board of Editors, Guidelines, From The Editor
(PDF, 23 K) |
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Diane C. Swonk
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The Challenge of Affluence
If economic policymakers behave prudently, the good times in the U.S.
can roll on for several more years. The future, however, is likely to
be very different from the past, as the expansion’s momentum shifts
from Wall Street to Main Street.
(PDF, 27K) Public
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Albert M. Wojnilower
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Life Without Treasury Securities
The U.S. Treasury debt may soon be paid off. However, Treasury securities
perform vital and difficult-to-replace roles: as riskless assets in portfolios;
benchmarks in the pric-ing of private securities; reliable hedges for
marketmakers in debt securities and derivatives; safe havens for funds;
and, as was formerly the case with gold, the chief international money.
If and when Treasury debt is paid off, the loss of Treasuries in these
roles means that securities markets will shrink, while banking-type intermediaries
gain. The perceived probability of governmental bail-out for vari-ous
kinds of debt in case of trouble will determine winners and losers among
candidates for replacements, with foreign central banks making the pivotal
choices. Retirement of Treasuries—especially short-term bills—is monetary
destruction. What instruments take their place and how completely and
smoothly, will have profound worldwide repercussions. Thus, the U.S. Treasury
should maintain some debt, despite the budget surplus.
(PDF, 35 K) Public
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David M. Jones
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The Demise of the 30-Year
Treasury Bond as a Benchmark for Pricing Fixed-Income Securities
With all the drama and finality that the prestigious Wall Street Journal
could muster, it declared this past May 3 that the reign of the 30-year
Treasury bond as the bench-mark for pricing fixed-income securities in
the $14.7 tril-lion U.S. bond market had ended. Without missing a beat
the Wall Street Journal shifted the “benchmark” crown to the brow of the
10-year Treasury note, already the basis for the rate that is charged
on most home mort-gages. This article will examine the reasons for the
demise of the 30-year Treasury bond as the U.S. bond market benchmark
and consider possible substitutes to be used as the new benchmarks for
pricing fixed-income securities. This search for a new benchmark is important
because of the crucial role that long-term interest rates play as an influence
on aggregate demand, particularly business investment and housing activity,
and in timely portfolio shifts between bonds and stocks.
(PDF, 58 K) Members only |
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Steven A. Zamsky
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Diminishing
Treasury Supply: Implications and Benchmark Alternatives
Over the last year, the fixed income markets have become increasingly
subject to technical distortions as the devel-opment of a U.S. government
surplus has resulted in a diminishing supply of U.S. Treasury securities.
This technical pressure has substantially inverted the yield curve, increased
levels and volatility in yield spreads between government bonds and other
fixed income securities, and created a great deal of confusion among market
partici-pants regarding appropriate benchmarks. The supply-induced inversion
affects corporate finance, risk management, valuation and asset allocation,
and will force the adoption of alternative benchmarks.
(PDF, 65 K) Members only |
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Wayne Hamra
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Bribery in International
Business Transactions and the OECD Convention: Benefits and Limitations
This article reviews common reasons why multinational firms have given
questionable payments to foreign offi-cials, noting that unsavory business
practices have been extremely difficult to change. In-depth interviews
with academics and executives examine the anticipated impact of the OECD’s
Convention on Combating International Bribery of Foreign Public Officials
in International Business Transactions on the flow of these illicit payments
and the pact’s likely effects on American firms’ foreign operations. The
paper also gleans strate-gies that firms have used to handle requests
for corrupt payments and explores ways that governments and inter-national
bodies might help them cope more effectively with these issues.
(PDF, 107K) Members only |
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Patricia M. Getz
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Focus on Statistics: Implementing the
New Sample Design for the Current Employment Statistics Survey
(PDF, 28K) Members only
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William Baumgartner and Andrew Gross
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Focus on Industries and Markets:
The Global Market for Electric Vehicles
Worldwide sales of electric vehicles are slated to increase at the rate
of sixty percent per annum in the coming years. We project global sales
of more than one million such vehicles valued at $24 billion in the year
2007. The number of such vehicles on the roads of six continents that
year should reach the four million mark. Most of the units will be cars
and light trucks, though a growing number of buses and sanitation trucks
will be evident as well. Despite rapid growth, electric vehicles as a
whole will constitute only 1.5 percent of global motor vehicle production
in 2007 and only 0.5 per-cent of the worldwide number of motor vehicles
on the road in that year. Clearly, we are looking at a narrow, albeit
fast-growing market.
(PDF, 38K) |
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Matthew A. Elrod-Erickson and William F. Ford
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Forum on Emerging
Issues: Economic Implications of the Human Genome Project
(PDF, 29 K) Members only |
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Book Reviews
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Henry Kaufman, On Money
and Markets: A Wall Street Memoir by Robert V. DiClemente
Willis Emmons, The Evolving Bargain: Strategic Implications of Deregulation
and Privatization by Gerald Musgrave
(PDF, 37 K) Public |
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