It seems nearly impossible, yet, that's exactly what Morgan Stanley's global
economic team suggests could happen next year.
Yet, that's exactly what Morgan Stanley's global
economic team suggests could happen next year in its recent report, «A Triple Taper Tantrum?»
Not exact matches
New big - data analytics by a City College of New York - led
team suggests that both an individual's
economic status and how they are likely to react to issues and policies can be inferred by their position in social networks.
One encouraging sign
suggesting that President Xi Jinping, Premier Li Keqiang and their
team mean business is their greater tolerance for slower
economic growth while they carry out reforms.
«Our results
suggest people are willing to bend ethical rules to help the people close to us, like our
team or family,» says Dr. Shaul Shalvi of Ben - Gurion University of the Negev's Department of Psychology and director of BGU's Center for Decision Making and
Economic Psychology.
The
team suggests that a combination of all those factors and several others should provide a much more balanced perspective on a city's «value» to its citizens from the
economic, aesthetic, environmental and other perspectives.
In their study, the
team from Oxford and Kew
suggest that if seed priority is determined only by whether they are endangered, of
economic value, or endemic (otherwise known as the 3E approach), this would make the collection significantly less diverse than it could be.
Shennan's
team also
suggests that this pattern of boom and bust had a negative impact on social,
economic, and cultural life in these communities.
The two available national - scale studies that examine the
economic effects of climate change across U.S. sectors, including the Impact Lab
team's American Climate Prospectus,
suggested that potential
economic effects could be significant and unevenly distributed across sectors and regions.
NASA's Earth Science News
Team: Your research
suggests that the climate science community ought to shift its focus from looking at the impacts of individual chemicals to
economic sectors.