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Table 1: Redistributive Effects for Accession Countries. Notes: Data as of 31 December 1998. Source: International Monetary Fund (2000), International Financial Statistics, March, Washington, D.C.

in The Enlargement of the European Union and the Redistribution of Seigniorage Wealth
by Holger Feist
"... In PAGE 8: ... Section 4 will then highlight the point of view of current member countries. In Table1 , the shares of seigniorage wealth being contributed and received by each country are stated, together with the resulting gains or losses. The situation refers to the point of time where the most complete data is available, which is 31 December 1998.... ..."

Table 6: External Financing Requirements and Sources

in Developing Stable and Competitive Financial Markets in Bulgaria
by Esen Ulgenerk, Leila Zlaoui 2000
"... In PAGE 6: ... A Matrix of Financial Markets Development Measures 33 Appendix 1: Reference Tables and Figure 1 Table 5. Gross Foreign Exchange Reserves and Vulnerability Indicators 37 Table6 . External Financing Requirements and Sources 38 Table 7.... ..."

Table 1: Means of Variables. Variable Measurement Mean Std. Dev. Source

in Technological Deepening In Developing Countries
by Development Research Group, George R. G. Clarke, George R. G. Clarke

Tables. 76 Productivity growth 1 The annual growth rate of total factor productivity. Because of the short period for which there is data available, the variable is not constructed for those countries in our sample which emerged as a result of a breakup of another country (i.e., Czech Republic, Slovak Republic, Croatia, Slovenia, Russia and Kazakhstan). The variable is constructed following Beck, Levine and Loayza (2000). Growth of productivity equals the growth of GDP per capita minus 0.3 times the growth in physical capital per worker. Source: International Monetary Fund (various) and Beck, Levine and Loayza (2000).

in Government Ownership of Banks
by Rafael La Porta, Florencio Lopez-de-silanes, Andrei Shleifer 2000
Cited by 4

TABLE 3 Total GDP (2000), GDP per capita (2000), and average GDP growth (1995-99)

in SUMMARY
by Kim Viborg Andersen, Niels Bjørn-andersen, Helle Zinner Henriksen, Copenhagen Business, School Morten Falch, Anders Henten, Danish Technical 2003

Table 3. Financial crisis and IMF programs (1970 - 1998)

in unknown title
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 11: ... Their currency crisis index reflects a combination of a sharp depreciation and/or a sharp drop in foreign exchange reserves. Their data consists of 80 episodes, essentially the currency crisis cases summarized in Table3 . After taking account of the fundamentals in each country, it turns out that a crisis in a neighboring country only modestly raises the probability of a currency crisis in Europe or Latin America, but significantly raises the... ..."

Table 1. Research funding and project funding in selected countries (2002)

in Creation of a European
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 5: ... 4.1 The funding base and project funding Table1 combines OECD R amp;D statistics based on the Frascati manual with project funding data produced in the PRIME project to compare between the six considered countries the overall funding of research and the role played by project funds. We notice that these data have to be used with some care, since there are a number of well-known methodological problems especially with R amp;D statistics, both for the business sector and for the higher education sector (Lepori 2006RE).... ..."

Table 2 Correlations of Measures of Monetary Policy

in What Do A Million Observations on Banks Say About the Transmission of Monetary Policy?
by Anil K. Kashyap, Jeremy C. Stein 2000
"... In PAGE 12: ... All three indicate that monetary policy was very tight following the Fed apos;s change in operating procedures in October 1979; all three suggest a relatively loose stance of policy in the period 1985-86; and all three capture the common wisdom that policy was tightened again in 1988, before being eased once more beginning in late 1989. Table2 documents the statistical correlations among the three measures. Overall, the numbers confirm the visual impressions from Figure 1, with some qualifications.... ..."
Cited by 13

Table 1 Placement of RPs. EDs, and Monev Funds in the Monetary A~zre~ates

in Reserve System;
by Written Principally By, I. Overview

Table 3: Determinants of Congressional Attentiveness to Monetary Policy,

in The Politics of Monetary Transmission in a Large Open Economy: Congressional Pressure on the Federal Reserve, 1973 - 1998
by J. Lawrence Broz
"... In PAGE 26: ... 4. Result s Regression results are reported in Table3 . Model 1 is for the entire Post - Bretton Woods period; Models 2 and 3 split the sample differently to account for changes in international capital mobility.... In PAGE 28: ... Likewise, a one standard deviation increase in REALTBIL is expected to yield a 27 percent increase in congressional activity directed at monetary policy. -- Table 5 about here -- Returning to Table3 , note that the controls for procedural norm s and rules in Congress, NEWCONG and COSPON , have large positive effects. Indeed, NEWCONG is by far the most important term in the model.... In PAGE 30: ... 29 4.1 Alternate sample dates Table3 also reports re sults using alternate sample periods (Models 2 and 3). Splitting the sample is meant to capture the influence of increasing levels of international capital mobility and to test the sensitivity of the initial results.... ..."
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