Question: Why does economics create so many opinions?

Readers Question: Economics is a social science, it contains graphs, diagrams and statistics to make strong evaluations and at university level it also often seems to have a strong Maths content which allows for even stronger analysis, calculation of events and evidence of theories. So how is it possible that often economic events such as …

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Swiss Franc Pegged Against the Euro

Switzerland has many envious economic data. It has low unemployment, low inflation, low government borrowing (budget surplus in 2010). It’s total national debt is a mere 38% of GDP.It has one of the highest GDP per Capita’s in the world $42,600 (2010 est.) CIA Switzerland. Switzerland is a landlocked country and virtually no mineral resources. …

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List of Countries with Highest Credit Ratings 2011

The highest credit rating is a AAA rating with ‘stable outlook’. A AAA credit rating implies there is no remote chance of default on government debt. A negative AAA credit rating implies there is a chance of downgrading the debt to AA. A credit rating of BBB- or higher, it is said to be ‘investment …

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Ben Bernake on Fragile Growth and Self-Defeating Cuts 2011

The Chairman of the Federal Reserve Ben Bernake recently warned that deep spending cuts could be “self-defeating to the still-fragile recovery”. Recent data showed that the global economic recovery remains fragile. The pace of economic growth is being held back by a combination of falling house prices, weak bank lending, high oil prices and lack …

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UK Economy 2010

2010 will be a difficult year for the UK economy. After the deepest recession since the 1930s, the outlook is for a sluggish recovery. Though recovery is welcome, it still leaves the problem of spare capacity, high unemployment and record levels of peacetime government borrowing. It will be a difficult tightrope between boosting economic growth …

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Forecasts for Unemployment 2009

As output falls, you would expect a rise in unemployment. If output is lower, firms will need less workers. Okun’s law is a look at the relationship between falling output and rising unemployment. As a rough rule of thumb, in Okun’s original statement of his law, he found a 3% increase in output corresponded to …

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