The rate of capital formation by businesses has long been among the most closely watched elements of the national accounts. During the last decade, this component of investment attracted considerable interest as capital spending helped support our uncommonly high rate of economic growth. Not only did this spending lift the growth of aggregate demand, it also increased our capacity for supplying goods and services, which in turn could allow output to continue growing rapidly in the future. ; This article analyzes the performance of conventional models of investment spending by comparing their abilities to describe this spending from 1960 to 1990 as well as their abilities to forecast spending during the 1990s. The authors find that recent sh...
This paper studies out the traditional explanatory factors of investment, then presents the contribu...
This paper studies out the traditional explanatory factors of investment, then presents the contribu...
Investment of U.S. firms responds asymmetrically to Tobin's Q: Investment of established firms -- `i...
Business outlays on intangible assets are usually expensed in economic and financial accounts. Follo...
The relative price of capital has declined at a rapid rate in the postwar period.This article provid...
A forward-looking, stochastic model of investment is developed in which capital spending is driven b...
"Business outlays on intangible assets are usually expensed in economic and financial accounts. Fol...
The neoclassical investment literature assumes that capital is homogenous, lives forever and has a c...
This paper focuses on the determinants of aggregate investment spending in the UK for the industrial...
This paper focuses on the determinants of aggregate investment spending in the UK for the industrial...
THE UNITED STATES has invested a smaller fraction of its gross national product in capital goods tha...
Recent research has indicated that investment in certain capital types, such as computers, has foste...
This article presents a new database of investment and capital in agriculture, manufacturing, and th...
Most growth models assume capital is homogeneous with regard to technology. This contradicts intuiti...
In recent work, Stacey Tevlin and Karl Whelan argue that aggregate econometric models fail to captur...
This paper studies out the traditional explanatory factors of investment, then presents the contribu...
This paper studies out the traditional explanatory factors of investment, then presents the contribu...
Investment of U.S. firms responds asymmetrically to Tobin's Q: Investment of established firms -- `i...
Business outlays on intangible assets are usually expensed in economic and financial accounts. Follo...
The relative price of capital has declined at a rapid rate in the postwar period.This article provid...
A forward-looking, stochastic model of investment is developed in which capital spending is driven b...
"Business outlays on intangible assets are usually expensed in economic and financial accounts. Fol...
The neoclassical investment literature assumes that capital is homogenous, lives forever and has a c...
This paper focuses on the determinants of aggregate investment spending in the UK for the industrial...
This paper focuses on the determinants of aggregate investment spending in the UK for the industrial...
THE UNITED STATES has invested a smaller fraction of its gross national product in capital goods tha...
Recent research has indicated that investment in certain capital types, such as computers, has foste...
This article presents a new database of investment and capital in agriculture, manufacturing, and th...
Most growth models assume capital is homogeneous with regard to technology. This contradicts intuiti...
In recent work, Stacey Tevlin and Karl Whelan argue that aggregate econometric models fail to captur...
This paper studies out the traditional explanatory factors of investment, then presents the contribu...
This paper studies out the traditional explanatory factors of investment, then presents the contribu...
Investment of U.S. firms responds asymmetrically to Tobin's Q: Investment of established firms -- `i...