My creativity is hitting new lows; fortunately there are several better minds around the world deserving a reading:
- Tyler Cowen is around here, and dares to answer the multimillion dollar question: why real interest rates are so high in Brazil? (Marginal Revolution)
- Wanna raise profits by 67%? Cut provisions for credit losses by 83%. Banks' balance sheets are pieces of fiction (Bloomberg).
- 120 years of home prices in US (The Big Picture).
- Schroders discusses Germany and the future of the euro (Scribd).
- The Economist's forum discusses capital controls, their utility and application (Economics by Invitation).
- Dani Rodrik, his meeting with Saif Qaddafi and the moral dilemma of helping dictatorships (Project Syndicate).
- A good summary of Scott Sumner's defense of nominal GDP targets (Adam Smith Institute).
Wednesday morning readings
Postado por
Drunkeynesian on
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
às
10:54 AM
Marcadores:
academia,
banks,
Brazil,
data,
development,
equities,
Europe,
funds,
interest rates,
macroeconomics,
real estate
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