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Keywords:economic conditions - United States 

Journal Article
The economic outlook for 1989

FRBSF Economic Letter

Journal Article
A perspective on the economy: three years of expansion

Review , Volume 60 , Issue May

Journal Article
How does monetary policy affect the economy?

Federal Reserve Bulletin , Issue Oct , Pages 803-814

Working Paper
An international perspective on oil price shocks and U.S. economic activity

The effect of oil price shocks on U.S. economic activity seems to have changed since the mid-1990s. A variety of explanations have been offered for the seeming change?including better luck, the reduced energy intensity of the U.S. economy, a more flexible economy, more experience with oil price shocks and better monetary policy. These explanations point to a weakening of the relationship between oil prices shocks and economic activity rather than the fundamentally different response that may be evident since the mid-1990s.> ; Using a dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model of world ...
Globalization Institute Working Papers , Paper 20

Speech
Trade deficits and the health of the U.S. economy

Remarks before the Little Rock Rotary Club, Little Rock, February 14, 2006 ; "If we create the conditions to let our private sector do what it does by its very nature--constantly adapt and reposition itself--then we have nothing to fear from competition from our trading partners, including those with whom we presently run big deficits.">
Speeches and Essays , Paper 79

Journal Article
Forecasting and modeling the U.S. economy in 1986-88

Quarterly Review , Volume 11 , Issue Win , Pages 7-20

Speech
A year-end wrap-up of the economy and a peek ahead

Remarks before the Longview Rotary Club, Longview, Texas, December 19, 2006
Speeches and Essays , Paper 109

Speech
Post-traumatic slack syndrome and the economic outlook (with thanks to Finn Kydland, Dolly Parton and John Kenneth Galbraith)

"I envision an output path going forward from here that looks something like a check mark, with the Johnny Mercer effect giving us a near-term snapback from the short, intense downstroke, followed by a transition to a long period of slower growth corresponding to the elongated side of the mark." ; Remarks at the Laboratory for Aggregate Economics and Finance, University of California, Santa Barbara, September 3, 2009.
Speeches and Essays , Paper 7

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anonymous 77 items

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economic conditions - United States 589 items

Monetary policy - United States 88 items

Monetary policy 83 items

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