Sean im going to call your attorney that i know. Ive got his number now. Laura that was a fantastic show tonight. We have Kelly Leffler on tonight. We are going to talk to her about the runoff. Awesome show as always. We will see you tomorrow night. Sean see you tomorrow night. Laura i am laura ingraham. The ingraham angle from washington. Black lives matter curricula slotting School Districts across the land. Do you know about it, im going to show it to you. We have our hands on it. Shelby steele has cant miss reaction. Her first interview since the Runoff Election was announced, senator Kelly Loeffler is here to tell us if she has faith in georges ability to successfully count legal votes in the runoff. Details of the radical beliefs of her opponent are coming out. The left covid nanny state now threatening a holiday with your family. Raymond arroyo brings us the worst offenders, the doom stairs coming seen and unseen. But first, insult, ignore, insight. Thats the focus of tonights a
Global economic policy uncertainty has increased since the financial crisis of 2007-09, negatively impacting cross-border capital inflows and raising the danger of contagion risks. A recent study shows how policymakers can mitigate these negative consequences using the policy tools at their disposal, particularly macroprudential policies.
Importance of managing economic uncertainty January 29, 2021, 3:31 PM IST
Dr Apoorva Javadekar is professor of finance at ISB, Hyderabad.
Fiscal stimuli, monetary loosening, Quantitative Easing (QE), suspension of bankruptcy laws and many more – governments around the worlds are firing heavy weapons to tackle the ongoing economic recession and India is no exception. With budget around the corner, “another round of big fiscal bonanza” is the only talk in the town! No doubt, fiscal spending is the need of the hour, and finance minister has already given indications that this will be a historic budget from fiscal standpoint. However, the other big theme developing in India is “uncertainty”! And I am not talking about uncertainty about how the pandemic will shape up but uncertainty about reforms.
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EUGENE, Ore. Jan. 21, 2021 Developing economies suffer from a paradox: they don t receive investment flows from developed economies because they lack stability and high-quality financial and lawmaking institutions, but they can t develop those institutions without foreign funds.
A study co-authored by Brandon Julio, a professor in the Department of Finance at the University of Oregon s Lundquist College of Business, found that bilateral investment treaties, commonly known as BITs, can help developing economies overcome this paradox, but only as long as those countries can demonstrate a commitment to property and contract rights.
Julio published the research, A BIT Goes a Long Way: Bilateral Investment Treaties and Cross-border Mergers, in a paper that published online Dec. 11 ahead of print in the