Section II. Prospects for North America and Japan

1998 ◽  
Vol 164 ◽  
pp. 36-45
Author(s):  
Nigel Pain

The present economic expansion in the United States continues to appear firmly based. GDP rose by 0.9 per cent in the final quarter of last year, giving calendar year growth of 3.8 per cent, the best outturn since 1988. Industrial production rose by 5¾ per cent in 1997, helped by the rapid expansion of cross-border trade in North America. Recent developments in Asia are likely to have an important bearing on economic prospects this year, with signs that weaker external demand has begun to affect the tradable goods sector and offset some of the remaining cyclical strength in domestic demand. The present strength of the dollar along with the decline in energy prices is continuing to help to balance the cost pressures emerging from the domestic labour market and bring a further temporary decline in price inflation. Overall, we continue to expect growth to slow to between 2½–2¾ per cent this year, with inflation declining to 1½ per cent.

2009 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 1850172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas J. Grennes

This paper evaluates sovereign wealth funds in light of the extreme volatility of energy prices and the severe global recession that began in 2008. A recent paper by Das characterized the assets of funds as showing steady growth in the past and likely increased importance in the future. However, recent developments have reduced the relative importance of funds and have demonstrated the sensitivity of the funds to energy prices and world business cycles. Investments by sovereign wealth funds have the potential to introduce political influence into corporate governance, but this potential is much smaller than the interventions into corporate governance by governments of the United States and elsewhere connected to corporate bail-outs during the recession. Lack of transparency remains a problem for certain sovereign wealth funds, but anti-recession interventions by governments have been characterized by extreme lack of transparency.


2015 ◽  
Vol 97 ◽  
Author(s):  
TONY SHEN ◽  
ARIEL LEE ◽  
CAROL SHEN ◽  
C.JIMMY LIN

SummaryThere are an estimated 6000–8000 rare Mendelian diseases that collectively affect 30 million individuals in the United States. The low incidence and prevalence of these diseases present significant challenges to improving diagnostics and treatments. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies have revolutionized research of rare diseases. This article will first comment on the effectiveness of NGS through the lens of long-tailed economics. We then provide an overview of recent developments and challenges of NGS-based research on rare diseases. As the quality of NGS studies improve and the cost of sequencing decreases, NGS will continue to make a significant impact on the study of rare diseases moving forward.


2009 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 281-298
Author(s):  
U Arabi

The rapid rise in food prices has been a burden on the poor in developing countries, including in India, who spend roughly half of their household incomes on food. In many countries and regions, food price inflation is higher than aggregate inflation and contributing to underlying inflationary pressures. Food grain prices have more than doubled between January 2006 and June 2008. More than 60 percent of this increase has occurred since January 2008 alone. Although the pass-through of rising global prices does not translate into an immediate and proportionate rise in domestic price levels, due to various factors such as a weakening dollar, domestic infrastructure, and price stabilization policies; increased food price volatility is expected even to continue for the presumable future and there is also possibility of further long run uncertainty due to climate change. With domestic prices rising, private consumption takes a plunge. Expectedly, global food price increases translate to higher prices in developing Asia, including in India particularly since food carries a large weight in the CPI of many of the region’s economies. In fact a number of factors have contributed to the rise in food prices in general; but the increase in energy prices and the related increases in prices of fertilizer and chemicals, which are either produced from energy or are heavy users of energy in their production process etc. are crucial. This has increased the cost of production, which ultimately gets reflected in higher food prices. Higher energy prices have also increased the cost of transportation, and increased the incentive to produce biofuels and encouraged policy support for bio-fuels production. The increase in bio fuels production has not only increased demand for food commodities, but also led to large land use changes which reduced supplies of wheat and crops that compete with food commodities used for biofuels in countries like India. Against these backdrops, this paper focus on the movements in global food price trends and its impact on management of food supply and security, the factors responsible for the rise in food prices in India and its impact on the issue of food security and sustainability of management of food economy of India. The paper concludes that in the short to medium run, the importance of safety nets to secure food for the needy is very much needed and in the long run, the notion of food security should move beyond a relatively static focus on food availability and access to one of higher productivity. Thus, as the majority of the poor in developing India live in rural areas and depend on agriculture, higher agricultural growth will provide food security by increasing supply, reducing prices, and raising incomes of poorer farm households in the near future


1987 ◽  
Vol 15 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 109-123
Author(s):  
Howard A. Hood

This is the third installment in a series of studies which began in 1983. The earlier essays surveyed computer-assisted legal research in Europe, the Commonwealth, and North America. The present study will concentrai on developments in the United States.


1994 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 136-152 ◽  
Author(s):  
Franklin Goza

This article is a comparative study of Brazilian immigration to Canada and the United States. Analysis of recently collected data in Toronto, Ontario and in a medium-size U.S. community facilitated the examination of the adaptation and adjustment experiences of a new group of immigrants to North America. This article begins with a discussion of the origins of this recent immigrant group and its rapid expansion. Next, it focuses on the labor force activities of Brazilian immigrants and compares and contrasts their experiences in the United States and Canada. A final section examines social adaptation in North America by exploring linguistic and cultural dimensions. This article closes with a section on the future aspirations of these immigrants.


1999 ◽  
Vol 167 ◽  
pp. 41-49 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nigel Pain

Recent economic data indicate that the momentum of the present cyclical expansion in the United States continues to be stronger than widely expected at the beginning of last year. GDP is provisionally estimated to have risen by around 3¾ per cent in 1998, with domestic demand rising by 5 per cent. The last three years have all now seen output growth of 3½-4 per cent with high resource utilisation but low, and declining, price inflation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 143 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaobing Liu ◽  
Jeffrey D. Spitler ◽  
Ming Qu ◽  
Liang Shi

Abstract Ground source (geothermal) heat pumps (GSHPs) can meet the thermal demands of buildings in an energy-efficient manner. The current high installation costs and long payback period limit the attractiveness of GSHP installation in the United States. Vertical borehole ground heat exchangers (VBGHEs), which are commonly used in GSHP systems, contribute most to the cost premium of GSHPs. Reducing the cost of VBGHEs could help increase market penetration of GSHP systems. This paper reviews recent developments for VBGHEs, including improvements in borehole heat transfer and borehole field layout, integration with thermal energy storage, and new design tools. Improvements in the borehole design and materials are more likely to be justified when the ground has high thermal conductivity. Integrating thermal energy storage can provide additional value to the GSHP system, especially when flexible electric demand at buildings becomes more valuable. Advanced design tools for VBGHEs that account for the thermal response of irregularly shaped borehole fields and that are more closely integrated with whole-building energy simulation programs may facilitate more innovations and optimization of GSHP system designs.


2000 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Elizabeth L. Bhar ◽  
Mark E. MacDonald

After a brief introduction to the policy and historical background of the regulation of gas distribution services, the authors review the main issues surrounding the unbundling of such by examining numerous models from Canada and the United States. Particular consideration is given to the effect of unbundling on the small commercial and residential customer. The article concludes with a discussion of unbundling in greenfield jurisdictions and cites recent developments in Scotia and New Brunswick to illustrate legislative to some of the specific issues raised.


Author(s):  
Barbara Arneil

In Chapter 4, the author analyses the introduction of domestic labour colonies in the United States and Canada. Unlike Europe, permanent labour colonies for the general population of ‘idle poor’ were rejected. Instead they were either implemented temporarily at moments of crisis (post-WWI and the Depression) or, more importantly, for racialized minorities over a longer period of time. The bulk of the chapter is thus spent on two case studies: colonies for freed African-American slaves in the United States viewed as the necessary corollary of emancipation and colonies for Metis and indigenous peoples of Canada as important tools in the assimilation of such populations. Racialized colonies were justified by many of the leading thinkers in both countries, including two of the most iconic and celebrated figures in American and Canadian history, Abraham Lincoln and Tommy Douglas, who make the case for colonies for freed slaves and Metis people, respectively, in their jurisdictions, nearly a century apart.


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