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- 1From:Business Economics (Vol. 57, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedW.W. Norton & Company, 2022 Over the last four decades since the 1980s, the Federal Reserve System has been privileged to have had a series of excellent Chairs. Ben Bernanke was among the greatest of these; in...
- 2From:Business Economics (Vol. 57, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedAbstract This article is an edited transcript of the session of the same name at the 38th Annual NABE Economic Policy Conference: Policy Options for Sustainable and Inclusive Growth. The panelists are experts from...
- 3From:Monthly Labor ReviewPeer-ReviewedRacial segregation exists in neighborhoods across the United States for several reasons. Redlining, racial covenants, and discrimination in the real estate market have all contributed to segregated communities. Although...
- 4From:Monthly Labor ReviewPeer-ReviewedAfter the effects of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic appeared in the nation's labor force statistics, a new "great" was added to the economic lexicon: the "Great Resignation." The premise of the "Great...
- 5From:Monthly Labor ReviewPeer-ReviewedDesigned by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the Job Search Supplement of the Survey of Consumer Expectations (SCE) provides details on individuals' desired work hours from 2013-21. The SCE collect information on...
- 6From:Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week2022 JAN 22 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week -- Investigators discuss new findings in Finance - Banking. According to news reporting from New York City, New York, by...
- 7From:Monthly Labor ReviewPeer-ReviewedJANUARY 2022 The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic derailed investment, employment, and productivity, thus decreasing output in the United States. As the U.S. economy recovers, economists are asking whether...
- 8From:Monthly Labor ReviewPeer-ReviewedJANUARY 2022 The economic impacts of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) spread across the globe quickly, and many American households found themselves in crisis. In "How much did the CARES Act help households stay...
- 9From:Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week2022 JAN 1 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week -- Data detailed on Economics - Monetary Economics have been presented. According to news reporting originating from...
- 10From:Yale Law Journal (Vol. 131, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedJudicial review of the Federal Reserve (Fed) is uncommon. But this does not mean that courts play no role in constraining the Fed. The law, and the way that the Fed expects courts to apply it, creates the boundaries...
- 11From:Vanderbilt Law Review (Vol. 74, Issue 5)The COVID-19 crisis underscored the urgency of digitizing sovereign money and ensuring universal access to banking services. It pushed two related ideas--the issuance of central bank digital currency and the provision of...
- 12From:Vanderbilt Law Review (Vol. 74, Issue 5)Central banks are increasingly called upon to address climate change. Proposals for central bank action on climate change range from programs of "green" quantitative easing to increases in risk-based capital requirements...
- 13From:Monthly Labor ReviewPeer-ReviewedEfforts to contain the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) changed where and how people work. For many parents, supervising their children's education occupied at least some portion of their available work time during...
- 14From:Monthly Labor ReviewPeer-ReviewedThe Consumer Price Index (CPI) data for April 2021 (and other recent months) received much attention in the media because these data showed larger price increases than had been seen in many years. The changes were not...
- 15From:Monthly Labor ReviewPeer-ReviewedOlder Americans are getting deeper in debt than ever before. In "The graying of household debt in the U.S." (Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, Economic Insights, first quarter 2021), Wenli Li explores the...
- 16From:Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment and Technology Law (Vol. 23, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThe advent of a retail central bank digital currency (CBDC) could reshape the US payments system. A retail CBDC would be a digital representation of the US dollar in the form of an account or token that is widely...
- 17From:Notre Dame Law Review (Vol. 96, Issue 4)INTRODUCTION Central bank money or liquidity is at the heart of modern economies. (1) It is issued against collateral designated as eligible by, and on terms defined by, central bank collateral frameworks, (2) which...
- 18From:North Carolina Banking Institute (Vol. 25)I. INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW Section 13(3) of the Federal Reserve Act authorizes Federal Reserve Banks, in "unusual and exigent circumstances" and upon the affirmative vote of at least five members of the Federal...
- 19From:CFO, The Magazine for Senior Financial Executives (Vol. 36, Issue 6)U.S. finance executives remain more optimistic about the economy than they were in the spring but very few expect to return to pre-COVID levels of employment and revenue until at least 2021, according to The CFO Survey....
- 20From:The Cato Journal (Vol. 40, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedInterest rates declined in the wake of the 2007-2009 global financial crisis. They remained low for most of the 2010s, only rising modestly toward the end of the decade. In some European countries, interest rates even...