Stock Strategies Valuations, Inflation and Real Returns The Yale
economics professor explains why he looks at 10 years of earnings and the importance of factoring in inflation when valuing assets.
The Yale
economics professor explains why he looks at 10 years of earnings and the importance of factoring in inflation when valuing assets.
Not exact matches
The fear of automation is centuries old, but as
economics professor David Autor
explains, it doesn't eliminate jobs, it changes them
That's because, «We send about 60 % of our pork variety meats» — things like pig feet and hocks — «to China currently,»
explains Dr. Scott Brown, an assistant extension
professor of agriculture and applied
economics at the University of Missouri.
As Mike Moffatt,
economics professor at the Richard Ivey School of Business,
explained to me: «Self - fulfilling prophecies play a large role in
economics.
Smith College
economics professor Andrew Zimbalist
explains how some major league franchises may be wasting their money trying to stay competitive by making big data an all - star.
In Saudi Arabia, there is no incentive for boys to work hard in school because the government will provide most men with jobs when they grow up,
explains Madawi Al - Rasheed, the author of A Most Masculine State: Gender, Politics and Religion in Saudi Arabia and a visiting
professor at the London School of
Economics.
Eastern China, home to the major cities, is wealthier, and its residents have higher per - capita incomes than those in the west, Valerie Karplus, an
economics and management
professor at MIT,
explained in an interview.
In a May 6 paper published in Health Affairs, David Cutler, the Otto Eckstein
Professor of Applied
Economics, and co-author Nikhil Sahni, a senior researcher in Harvard's
Economics Department, point to several factors, including a decline in the development of new drugs and technologies and increased efficiency in the health care system, to
explain the recent slowdown.
According to researchers Dr. Edith Sand, an economist at the Bank of Israel and an instructor at TAU's Berglas School of
Economics, and Prof. Victor Lavy, a
professor at Hebrew University and University of Warwick in England, the classroom teacher's unwitting prejudice is a key factor
explaining the divergence of boys» and girls» academic preferences.
«Palliative care programs are increasingly prevalent in U.S. hospitals but the financial incentives for hospitals to deploy them are not well - understood,»
explains lead author Ian McCarthy, Ph.D., an assistant
professor of
economics at Emory.
On the first day, the
professor explained that
economics is based on the belief that people are self - interested and maximize that self - interest.
Although
economics professors carefully
explain the importance and role of optimal decision making to their students, ironically they lack the most basic information regarding their own instructional
Presenting their results in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), Astrid Dannenberg, Postdoc researcher at the Environmental
Economics Unit, University of Gothenburg and Columbia University, and
Professor Scott Barrett, Columbia University,
explain the paradox of why countries would agree to a collective goal, aimed at reducing the risk of climate catastrophe, but act as if they were blind to this risk.
Chris Essex and Ross McKitrick,
professor of
economics have a book which
explains more fully these ideas.
«By pricing carbon it's going to increase the cost of production, and that will make investors less willing to locate their operations in the province,»
explains Trevor Tombe, a
professor of
economics at the University of Calgary.
Gillian Hadfield, a
professor of law and
economics at the University of Southern California,
explains: «We have created a set of rules where there are more exceptions if it is just lawyers that want to play.
As
professor of
economics Larry Smith of Waterloo University
explains, «Never forget to hold to that passion!»