191 research outputs found

    Replication data for: Measuring Intertemporal Substitution in Consumption: Evidence from a VAT Increase in Japan

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    Cashin, David, and Unayama, Takashi. (2016) "Measuring Intertemporal Substitution in Consumption: Evidence from a VAT Increase in Japan." Review of Economics and Statistics 98:2, 285-297

    Replication data for: Measuring Intertemporal Substitution in Consumption: Evidence from a VAT Increase in Japan

    No full text
    Cashin, David, and Unayama, Takashi. (2016) "Measuring Intertemporal Substitution in Consumption: Evidence from a VAT Increase in Japan." Review of Economics and Statistics 98:2, 285-297

    The Agitator's Daughter: A Memoir of Four Generations of One Extraordinary African-American Family

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    Includes descriptive metadata provided by producer in MP4 file: "Politics, Economics and Social Issues - Video - The Agitator's Daughter: A Memoir of Four Generations of One Extraordinary African-American Family." Sheryll Cashin, lawyer, professor, Vanderbilt alumnus, Board of Trust member, and author of the book The Agitator's Daughter, speaks on Nov. 6, 2008, about the roles her family and Vanderbilt played in shaping her activism and success. This is the second annual Walter Murray Jr. Commons Lecture. Frank Wcislo, Dean of the Commons, speaks briefly about Murray and the Vanderbilt Commons, and introduces Cashin. She answers questions after the lecture

    Book Review of Bonnie Cashin Farmer, A Nursing Home and its Organizational Climate: An Ethnography (Auburn House 1996)

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    Review of the book Bonnie Cashin Farmer, A Nursing Home and its Organizational Climate: An Ethnography (Auburn House 1996). About the author, acknowledgments, appendix, bibliography, index. ISBN 0-86569-262-9 [176 pp. $49.95 Cloth. 88 Post Road West, Westport CT 06881.

    Parity Reversion in Real Exchange Rates: Fast, Slow, or Not at All?

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    This paper tests for purchasing power parity (PPP) using real effective exchange rate data for 90 developed and developing countries in the post-Bretton Woods period. Support for PPP is found, since the majority of countries experience finite deviations of real exchange rates from parity. The speed of parity reversion is found to be typically much faster for developed countries than for developing countries and to be considerably faster for countries with flexible nominal exchange rate regimes compared with countries having fixed nominal exchange rate regimes. Copyright 2006, International Monetary Fund

    The Long-Run Behavior of Commodity Prices: Small Trends and Big Variability

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    Using the longest dataset publicly available (The Economist's index of industrial commodity prices), we analyze the behavior of real commodity prices over the period 1862-1999 and have two main findings. First, while there has been a downward trend in real commodity prices of about 1 percent per year over the last 140 years, little support is found for a break in the long-run trend decline in commodity prices. Second, there is evidence of a ratcheting up in the variability of price movements. The amplitude of price movements increased in the early 1900s, while the frequency of large price movements increased after the collapse of the Bretton Woods regime of fixed exchange rates in the early 1970s. Although there is a downward trend in real commodity prices, this is of little practical policy relevance, since it is smalll and completely dominated by the variability of prices. Copyright 2002, International Monetary Fund

    MnWE Journal Volume 1 (2024)

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    This is the complete contents of the MnWE Journal Volume 1, edited by UMD Professor David Beard, using the UMN Pressbooks editing platform. It has been uploaded with the full and written permission of the MnWE executive committee. All authors retain copyright to their own works.MnWE (Minnesota Writing & English)Beard, David; Jewell, Richard; CAMPBELL-JENSEN, ALLISON; Jiang, Yanmei; GHIMIRE, ASMITA; DAIGLE, BRENT; NEVAREZ, EDUARDO; WRIGHT, ELIZABETHADA; GORA, FRIDAY; CAIN, JABARI; CASHIN, KRISTINA; YANG, LAITZIA; BRENDEN, MARK; SCHROM, MARLY; TARIS, MARY; DAY, MICHAELA; BRUCH, PATRICK; SPLEISS, SARAH; JONES MOZENTER, SUKI; CAIN, SYLVIA; REYNOLDS, THOMAS. (2024). MnWE Journal Volume 1 (2024). Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/262678

    Ralph D. Abernathy and Others, circa 1969

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    Ralph David Abernathy is shown with others at a meeting. Written on verso: RDA Cashin[?]The Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library acknowledges the generous support of the Joseph & Evelyn Lowery Institute for Justice and Human Rights, the Joseph Echols Lowery Irrevocable Trust, and other donors in supporting the processing and digitization of Morehouse College's Joseph Echols and Evelyn Gibson Lowery Collection

    First Class of Students

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    Most of the first class of students posing on campus. From left to right: Ian S. Rudnick, James C. Howald, Thomas L. Yach, unidentified, Thomas Robert Kendall, Arthur Bardige, Clarice M. Moreth, David F. Parrish, Michael Yost, Jr., Gloria C. Cashin, Leroy Bolden, Robert O. Plaisted, Earl F. Hughes, unidentified, Georges L. Weatherly, Roller C. Beckhart, and Joaquin Lira-Olivareshttps://nsuworks.nova.edu/nsudigital_firststu/1000/thumbnail.jp

    Standardising the Collection of Socio-Demographic Data in Pain Research

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    We begin this letter by acknowledging the European Journal of Pain's commitment to promoting inclusion, diversity and equity in pain research and upholding the pain field to rigorous standards of integrity in research conduct (Palermo et al. 2025; Palermo et al. 2023). In this correspondence, we draw the attention of your readership to the recent publication of our author group in Lancet EClinicalMedicine: ‘Identifying Social Factors that Stratify Health Opportunities and Outcomes (ISSHOOs) in pain research: Consensus recommendations for the collection and reporting of equity-relevant data’ (Karran et al. 2025b). This manuscript details globally relevant, consensus-derived recommendations for use in human pain research that are closely aligned with the principles and values your journals promote.Emma L. Karran, Aidan G. Cashin, Alessandro Chiarotto, Saurab Sharma, Trevor Barker, Mark A. Boyd, Lara J. Maxwell, Vina Mohabir, Jennifer Petkovic, Peter Tugwell, G. Lorimer Mosele
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