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交易员分析员培训资料系列历史数据和分析3doc资料.doc

1、此文档收集于网络,如有侵权请联系网站删除october 29, 200820081029 American Income InequalityAmerican InequalityThe Top Tenth:Within the Top Tenth:The Top Ten Thousand:A Closer Look:Differences in Log Earnings:Wage Ratios:Decomposing:Start with the 1940 distribution:Change the Xs (characteristics):Change the betas (price

2、s):Change the residuals:Before 1940:After WWII:Posted at 01:39 PM in Lecture Notes | Permalink | Comments (0) October 27, 200820081027 American Economic History: The Furnace Where the Future Is Being ForgedInvestment, Resources, Invention, and Technological Change America is:o Resource richo Skilled

3、 labor abundanto Energetic, entrepreneurial labor abundant (to have crossed an ocean.) America is also capital rich, and new capital rich-hence technologically advanced * The furnace where the future is being forged.Labor and CapitalAmericas Commitment to Education: Iowa: Claudia Goldin and Larry Ka

4、tz look at Iowa high schools America has a very strong and very early commitment to general education Europe: why not provide people with the education theyll need early (answer: people change jobs, the economy changes, the background knowledge base is very important) Europe: educate the working cla

5、sses and theyll ask for more (response: yes, thats the point) Americas commitment to human capital as a very powerful multiplier of productivityAmerica and Unions: The Early Stages: America has a long history of labor unions America has a long, bloody labor history o Pinkertonso Federals-Grover Clev

6、eland vs. John Peter Altgeld in the breaking of the Pullman strikeo Early unions: Knights of Laboro Early unions: IWWo Union threat: the IWW and Henry Fords $5 day. Just because unions dont have lots of members and win lots of strikes doesnt mean that they are unimportantAmerica and Unions: Craft Un

7、ions: Craft unions: the AFL Craft unions: the AMA After WWI: the Palmer Raids and the Red Scare The 1920s: Welfare Capitalism Legal doctrines: Lochner and its friendsAmerica and Unions: The Great Depression and After: Sit-down strikes Industrial unionism-the CIO The AFL-CIO The UMW and the Teamsters

8、 The NLRA and the NLRB The War Labor Board The Taft-Hartley Act Rolling Back Unionized Americao Lawyerso Right-to-worko Interstate competitiono International competition *Monopoly and voice faces of unionism The situation today: public-sector unions have a powerful edge. private sector unions. not s

9、o. What role has globalization played in the erosion of union power? Uncertain.Investment Banking: Routing Around Capital Market Failures: The coming of the corporation: limited liability and professional management Who guards the guardians? Example: Leland Stanford (and Huntington, and Hopkins, and

10、 Crocker), the Central Pacific, and British investors. Separation of ownership from management creates all kinds of principal-agent and management-monitoring problems How to solve them? Finance capitalism. J.P. Morgan and the Money Trust Complaints about the Money Trust: Louis Brandeis: personal pow

11、er is unAmerican Complaints about the Money Trust: the Northern Securities Panic Progressive attack on the Money Trust fails-until 1933 comes* Finance After the Great Depression:* With the coming of FDR, the Progressive Era program for taming the Money Trust is dusted off and put into action: The ex

12、altation of management at the expense of ownership and monitoring The end of utility empires-the PUHC Act The separation of investment from commercial banking The large-scale provision of information The level playing field The Berle-Means problem: managers select themselves, so how are stockholders

13、 interests guarded? The Galbraithian technostructureRecent Finance: The coming of the 1980s o Junk bondso Takeovers Rapidly-climbing CEO pay The reintegration of high finance How well do our financial markets really work? Its still an open questionUpward MobilityHoratio Alger and Benjamin FranklinEu

14、rope is supposed to be about who your family is America is supposed to be about who you are-although it was one of Napoleons generals who said that I am my ancestors Abraham Lincolns belief: anyone who wants to can move up-a combination of: Plenty of room at the top Lots of immigrants to (temporaril

15、y) fill in at the bottom A fairly equal distribution of wealth meaning that starts were not too far apart All This Changes in the Middle of the Gilded Age:The Closing of the Frontier and the Great Immigration WaveNo more free land-direct effects (cant homestead) and indirect effects (immigrants now

16、put downward pressure on real wages) Immigrants: are the new immigrants not from northwest Europe American? In the case of Asians, the answer is obviously no Races in Pennsyvlania in 1910: whites, blacks, slavs, Latins. The peak of American inequality Ending the Gilded AgeProgressives The New Deal p

17、icks up the Progressive Era program, and enacts it Immigration restrictions play an uncertain but probably large role Social democracy and social insurance. Minimum wages Unions again Middle-Class AmericaThe Great Compression in wages Unions? Wartime (WWII, that is)? Social changes Supply and demand

18、? Free land again-this time free land to buy a house within commuting distance of anywhere. The Returns to SkillThe overeducated American The enormous expansion of wage inequality since 1970 All of a sudden, position matters a lot The Anemia of Social Democracy in AmericaAmerica was never as upwardl

19、y mobile a place as it thought it was. Europe was never as rigid a place as it thought it was. Increasing risk (but the risk of being bankrupt instead of dead is a good thing-as Martha Stewart would say-no? Why Doesnt the United States Have a European-Style Welfare State?Racism? The myth of Horatio

20、Alger? Another possible answer: its just taking us a long time to build it up.Posted at 01:55 PM in Lecture Notes | Permalink | Comments (0) October 22, 200820081022 The Global EconomyWorld War II:Origins of World War II In Germany: the Great Depression brings Hitler to power No Great Depression in

21、Germany, no Hitler Hitler takes his Malthus too seriously o Believes that only a populous Germany can be a strong Germanyo Believes that only a Germany with lots of farmland can be a populous Germanyo Hence wants to do to the Poles and the Russians what the Americans did to the Indians Roosevelt eag

22、er to fight Hitler to the last Briton (and give them plenty of materiel in the meantime) o America not so eagero How eager was Roosevelt to commit America to World War II in Europe? Not clear. o And after Pearl Harbor it was Germany that declared war on the United States In Japan, the Greater East A

23、sia Co-Prosperity Sphere o Takeover of Manchuria in 1931o War with China beginning in 1937o Occupation of Indo-China in 1940o Roosevelts ultimatum: Withdraw from Indochina (and China?) or well cut off your oil Dean Acheson at the State Department did indeed cut off their oil Pearl Harbor as the resp

24、onseRough Numbers with Respect to Military Production (as percent of Nazi Germany): 450%: U.S. 150%: Britain 100%: Germany 80%: Russia 25%: Japan 15%: ItalyThe wonder is not that the allies won given that they decided to fight The wonder is that they decided to fight to the end The wonder is that th

25、e axis powers held on for so long. o Out-produced five-to-oneo Professional excellence of the Nazi Army.o Professional excellence of the start-of-war Japanese fleet.50 million dead in World War II 6 million Jews 5 million Chinese civilians 8 million Russian civilians 4 million Russian POWs 2 million

26、 Polish civilians Et cetera. Plus all the battle and military deaths.World War II Cured the Depression in the U.S.: Extraordinary levels of aggregate demand spending-military spending-rises to 40% of GDP The ten-million man army Unemployment down to 2% or lower Rosie the Riveter Price controls and r

27、ationing After WWII, few doubted Keyness claim that government could control the economyTrying to stop the return of the Great Depression: The Employment ActTrying to stop the return of the Great Depression: The Marshall Plan Eichengreen and DeLongs interpretation of the Marshall Plan: key benefit t

28、hat it allowed the good mixed economy guys to win the political struggle in Western Europeo Alternatives? Populist statists a la Peron-and stagnationo Alternatives? Communists-and eventual stagnationo Alternatives? Right-wing hold what we have semi-fascists Are Eichengreen and DeLong right? o Perhap

29、s the threat from Stalin had as much to do with post-WWII consensus politics in Western Europe as the Marshall Plan did. * Perhaps good leadership: Schumann, Monnet, de Gasperi, Attlee, Adenauer, Erhard.Postwar:After the Postwar: Productivity Slowdown and End of the Population Explosion:Posted at 01

30、:01 PM in Lecture Notes | Permalink | Comments (0) 20081013: The Great DepressionAudio: The Great DepressionThe Collapse of Real GDP, and Recovery:Components of Real GDP:The Consumption Function:The Semi-Stabilizing Role of Government:Dr. New Deal and Dr. Win-the-War:The Collapse of Private Investme

31、nt: Can account, with multiplier, for essentially everything.The Propagation Mechanism: Three Theories for the Collapse of Investment (and Consumption): Friedman: Inept Federal Reserve policy and banking crises. DeLong and Summers: Expected deflation and self-fulfilling expectations. Bernanke: Bank

32、failures and the credit channel.The Impulse:?1928 The construction boom is over. Farmers share of the national income has dropped from 15 to 9 percent since 1920. Between May 1928 and September 1929, the average prices of stocks will rise 40 percent. Trading will mushroom from 2-3 million shares per

33、 day to over 5 million.1929 Herbert Hoover becomes President. Business inventories grows three times larger than the year before. Freight carloads and manufacturing fall. Automobile sales decline by a third in the nine months before the crash. Recession begins in August, two months before the stock

34、market crash. Stock market crash begins October 24. Investors call October 29 Black Tuesday. Congress passes Agricultural Marketing Act to support farmers until they can get back on their feet.1930 By February, the Federal Reserve has cut the prime interest rate from 6 to 4 percent. Expands the mone

35、y supply with a major purchase of U.S. securities. However, for the next year and a half, the Fed will add very little money to the shrinking economy. Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon announces that the Fed will stand by as the market works itself out: Liquidate labor, liquidate stocks, liquidate re

36、al estate values will be adjusted, and enterprising people will pick up the wreck from less-competent people. The Smoot-Hawley Tariff passes on June 17. With imports forming only 6 percent of the GNP, the 40 percent tariffs work out to an effective tax of only 2.4 percent per citizen. The first bank

37、 panic occurs late this year. Democrats gain in Congressional elections, but still do not have a majority. GDP falls 9.4 percent from the year before. The unemployment rate climbs from 3.2 to 8.7 percent.1931 No major legislation is passed addressing the Depression. A second banking panic occurs in

38、the spring. GDP falls another 8.5 percent. Unemployment rises to 15.9 percent.1932 GDP falls a record 13.4 percent. Unemployment rises to 23.6 percent. Industrial stocks have lost 80 percent of their value since 1930. 10,000 banks have failed since 1929, or 40 percent of the 1929 total. The Fed make

39、s its first major expansion of the money supply since February 1930. Congress creates the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. Congress passes the Federal Home Loan Bank Act. Bonus March: July 28, 1932 Top tax rate is raised from 25 to 63 percent. Roosevelt: I pledge you, I pledge myself, to a new de

40、al for the American people.1933 A third banking panic occurs in March. Roosevelt declares a Bank Holiday 100 Days of intensive legislative activity. Millionaire businessmen discuss overthrowing Roosevelt with a military coup. Talk to General Smedley Butler. Congress authorizes creation of the Agricu

41、ltural Adjustment Administration, the Civilian Conservation Corps, the Farm Credit Administration, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Federal Emergency Relief Administration, the National Recovery Administration, the Public Works Administration and the Tennessee Valley Authority. Congres

42、s passes the Emergency Banking Bill, the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933, the Farm Credit Act, the National Industrial Recovery Act and the Truth-in-Securities Act. U.S. goes off the gold standard. Roosevelt rejects Keynes advice to begin heavy deficit spending.1934 Congress authorizes creation of the Fe

43、deral Communications Commission, the National Mediation Board and the Securities and Exchange Commission. Congress passes the Securities and Exchange Act and the Trade Agreement Act. The economy turns around: GDP rises 7.7 percent. Unemployment falls to 21.7 percent. A long road to recovery begins.

44、Sweden becomes the first nation to recover fully from the Great Depression. 1935 The Supreme Court declares the National Recovery Administration to be unconstitutional. Congress authorizes creation of the Works Progress Administration, the National Labor Relations Board and the Rural Electrification

45、 Administration. Congress passes the Banking Act of 1935, the Emergency Relief Appropriation Act, the National Labor Relations Act, and the Social Security Act. GDP grows another 8.1 percent. Unemployment falls to 20.1 percent.1936 The Supreme Court declares part of the Agricultural Adjustment Act t

46、o be unconstitutional. Top tax rate raised to 79 percent. GDP grows a record 14.1 percent. Unemployment falls to 16.9 percent. Germany becomes the second nation to recover fully from the Great Depression1937 The Supreme Court declares the National Labor Relations Board to be unconstitutional. Roosev

47、elt seeks to enlarge and therefore liberalize the Supreme Court. GDP rises 5.0 percent. Unemployment falls to 14.3 percent. World War II in Asia begins with the Japanese invasion of China.1938 Congress passes the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938 and the Fair Labor Standards Act. GDP falls 4.5 percent. Unemployment rises to 19.0 percent. B

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