When Do Commodity Prices Matter for the Carry Trade? The Role of FX Liquidity

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandre Jeanneret
Keyword(s):  
2019 ◽  
Vol 61 ◽  
pp. 627-642
Author(s):  
Zesheng Sun ◽  
Yaoqing Wang ◽  
Xu Zhou ◽  
Lunan Yang

1998 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 70 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Nadolny

Agriculture has almost certainly contributed to the decline of native vegetation and wildlife in rural Australia. A prevalent culture supports agricultural systems that rely on the use of exotic plants and animals and greater use of chemicals and machinery. In general, these systems do not fully utilize or take account of the indigenous biota. The full implications of implementing such farming systems on a landscape scale are seldom considered. I use the grazing industry on the Northern Tablelands of New South Wales to illustrate two contrasting approaches: (1) "pasture improvement" involving replacement of native with exotic species versus (2) retention and management of existing native and naturalized pasture species. Pasture improvement has been refined by extensive agronomic research, plant selection and field testing of techniques. Nevertheless, the approach is losing support among farmers because of high inputs required to maintain "improved" pastures, the fragility of these pastures during droughts, low commodity prices, longterm declines in soil structure and increases in soil acidity. Other side-effects include tree decline, reduced diversity of indigenous herbaceous plant communities and loss of wildlife. Using native pastures may offer some solutions to these problems, but the level of understanding required to manage them effectively is limited. Exotic sown pastures have no clear advantage in areas with poor soils and irregular rainfall, and the environmental impacts of new developments involving large-scale pasture improvement can be unacceptable. I conclude that native and naturalised pastures are the best option for most of the region and sown pastures should be used strategically.


2014 ◽  
Vol 05 (05) ◽  
pp. 200-212
Author(s):  
Christopher L. Gilbert ◽  
Harriet K. Mugera

Significance The collapse in commodity prices, above all oil, plus the impact of an extended lockdown have depressed Russia's exports, investment and consumption. The economic prospects could be even bleaker if a second wave of COVID-19 infections strikes later this year. If that is avoided, there is reason to believe the economy will prove more resilient than in previous crises. Impacts Months of missing growth mean another year lost for the president's ambitious development plan. The latest government plan appears to make no provision for a possible second wave of infection. The plan speaks optimistically about a post-COVID-19 digital economy but offers few ideas for achieving it. The role of small and medium-sized enterprises was already relatively weak and is likely to diminish further as a result of the lockdown.


Author(s):  
Anna Chadwick

The conclusion begins with a discussion of the significance of some recent developments in the trajectory of agricultural commodity prices. The author then draws together the key arguments developed throughout the book, and offers some final reflections on the relationship between law and the political economy of hunger. The reflections are organized around the intellectual debts schema set out in the Introduction. Using the lenses of entitlement, commodification, Institutionalist insights, and Karl Polanyi’s motif of ‘double movement’, the author concludes with a determination on whether existing legal solutions to the challenge of world hunger are likely to be effective when the role of law in constituting markets and in conditioning logics of accumulation is taken into account.


Author(s):  
Rossarin Osathanunkul ◽  
Chatchai Khiewngamdee ◽  
Woraphon Yamaka ◽  
Songsak Sriboonchitta

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