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More than half a decade has passed since the bursting of the housing bubble and the collapse of Lehman Brothers. In retrospect, what is surprising is that these events and their consequences came as such a surprise. What was it that prevented most of the world from recognizing the impending crisis and, looking ahead, what needs to be done to prevent something similar? Measuring Wealth and Financial Intermediation and Their Links to the Real Economy identifies measurement problems associated with the financial crisis and improvements in measurement that may prevent future crises, taking account of the dynamism of the financial marketplace, in which measures that once worked well have become misleading. In addition to outlining advances in measuring financial activity, the contributors also investigate the effects of the crisis on households and nonfinancial businesses. They show that households' experiences varied greatly, and some even experienced gains in wealth, while nonfinancial businesses' lack of access to credit in the recession may have been a more important factor than the effects of policies stimulating demand.
Emerging from the ruins of the Second World War, the Japanese
economy has grown at double-digit rate throughout much of the 1950s
and 1960s, and, when the oil crisis of the 1970s slowed growth
throughout the industrialized world, Japanese growth throughout the
industrialized world, Japanese growth rates remained relatively
strong. There have been many attempts by scholars from a wide range
of disciplines to explain this remarkable history, but for
economists interested in the quantitative analysis of economic
growth and the principal question addressed is how Japan was able
to grow so rapidly.
The productivity slowdown of the 1970s and 1980s and the resumption
of productivity growth in the 1990s have provoked controversy among
policymakers and researchers. Economists have been forced to
reexamine fundamental questions of measurement technique. Some
researchers argue that econometric approaches to productivity
measurement usefully address shortcomings of the dominant index
number techniques while others maintain that current productivity
statistics underreport damage to the environment. In this book, the
contributors propose innovative approaches to these issues. The
result is a state-of-the-art exposition of contemporary
productivity analysis.
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