Not exact matches
The work was
done by
economists Matthew Gibson and Jeffrey Shrader, and it analyzes time use day from the American Time Use
Survey, which asks Americans to give detailed accounts of how they spend their days.
The unemployment rate was last below 8 % in January 2009, at 7.7 %, and
economists don't expect it to drop below 8 % again till 2013, according to the latest
survey of 43 forecasters conducted by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.
A
survey of nearly 2,000
economists, security analysts and corporate executives conducted in March and April found that in 30 out of 41 countries — including the U.S. — these experts are calling for stocks to outperform bonds by a wider margin than they
did when last
surveyed in 2015.
But comparing the sensor data with the
economists»
survey data, Waber found the opposite: Bankers belonging to a small, tight - knit group of co-workers who spoke frequently with one another — an indicator of what social scientists call social cohesion — were not only happier in their jobs, they also got more work
done, shared ideas faster and divvied up tasks more efficiently.
The
Economist: School choice
does not work as well as its advocates hope WashPost: Exodus from PR grows as island struggles to rebound from Hurricane Maria Salt Lake Tribune: While the principal made thousands marketing this school, students» grades were mediocre Voice of San Diego: Tormented by a Student's Sexual Assault, a Teacher Falls NPR: More Than Half Of Transgender Teachers
Surveyed Tell NPR They Are Harassed Crain's Detroit: Duggan aims to knit public schools, charters with transportation
For over twenty years, as documented by the
survey of
economists done by Dr. Ross McKitrick in his PhD dissertation and well - developed since then both in studies and in practical application we've known the current tax system is extremely inefficient compared to the double dividend (or better) of a carbon tax for revenue.
In truth,
economists don't agree on any policy issue except free trade, as academic
surveys have repeatedly confirmed.
For the Copenhagen Consensus, one of the lead
economists of the IPCC, Professor Gary Yohe,
did a
survey of all the problems and all the benefits accruing from a temperature rise over this century of about approximately 4C.
If one looks at the numbers provided by FNB Property
Economist John Loos, «with widespread weakness in sentiment late in 2017, showing up in both Consumer and Business Confidence readings as well as the Rand, it came as no surprise to see households remain a relatively conservative bunch at the time of the fourth quarter 2017 FNB Estate Agent
survey, which was
done in October».
...
Economists aren't always right, but on this at least they agree: A new Wall Street Journal
survey of forecasters found 44 believe the housing market has reached its bottom; only three don't.