- also
aggravate recessions and lead to a
deflationary spiral (). Some
economists argue that
prolonged deflationary periods are
related to the underlying...
- In
philosophy and logic, a
deflationary theory of
truth (also
semantic deflationism or
simply deflationism) is one of a
family of
theories that all have...
- The GDP gap or the
output gap is the
difference between actual GDP or
actual output and
potential GDP, in an
attempt to
identify the
current economic position...
-
accept or lean
toward correspondence theories, 21%
accept or lean
toward deflationary theories and 14%
epistemic theories.
Correspondence theories emphasize...
- The
Depression of 1920–1921 was a
sharp deflationary recession in the
United States,
United Kingdom and
other countries,
beginning 14
months after the...
-
hundred ounces troy [12 kg] of fine gold". John
Maynard Keynes,
citing deflationary dangers,
argued against resumption of the gold standard. By
fixing the...
- the work of Keynes. The
following decades saw
occasional mention of
deflationary spirals due to debt in the mainstream,
notably in The
Great Crash, 1929...
- for
example in the Jenkins–Traub
algorithm In philosophy, the use of a
deflationary theory of truth,
where the term
truth is
rejected as a real property...
- general,
began to decline,
although wages held
steady in 1930. Then a
deflationary spiral started in 1931.
Farmers faced a
worse outlook;
declining crop...
-
Economists state that for
prices to
return to pre-pandemic
levels a
deflationary period would be required,
which is
usually ****ociated with recession...