Economic Indicators for Professionals

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A01=Charles Steindel
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Author_Charles Steindel
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Coincident Index
Eastern Time
ECI
Economic data
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Federal Nondefense Spending
Federal policy
Federal Reserve
GDP
Gdp Account
Gdp Estimate
Gdp Growth
GDP Price Index
Income
Inflation
Labour markets
Laspeyres Price Index
Nominal Gdp
Nonfarm Economy
Personal Saving Rate
Potential Gdp
Quarterly Gdp Growth
Real Consumer Spending
Real Gdp Data
Real Gdp Growth
Real GDP.
Residential Investment
Retail Control
Sic Classification
Steindel Charles
TED Spread
Tic

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138559240
  • Weight: 590g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Aug 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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We are bombarded with economic numbers: unemployment, retail sales, inflation, GDP—the list goes on and on. Some analyst or another is constantly telling us about an obscure statistic that is the key to our future, or is apparently the indicator that the "Fed" will be using to key off its decisions. With economic numbers playing such a central role in the national and world dialogue on policy and markets, and spilling over into the political arena, a broad review of what they are all about is timely. This book reviews the critical US economic data, and how one may put the numbers into an intellectual structure that will depict evolving economic reality. The work is aimed at those who want and need to get some understanding about how the data contributes to a big picture of the economy and guides policy.

The objective is for the reader to grasp the overall logic of the data—how each piece of the puzzle contributes to our understanding of the overall economy. This is the way the Fed looks at the numbers.

There are other books that go through the economic numbers, but they do so in a "bottom-up" fashion, describing a series in some detail and adding something about how financial markets may respond to it. This book naturally has considerable discussion of series, but views them as part of the overall mosaic, not items of fundamental interest in themselves.

Charles Steindel is Scholar in Residence at the Anisfield School of Business, Ramapo College of New Jersey, USA, and is also editor of Business Economics, the journal of the National Association for Business Economics. He was formerly Chief Economist of the New Jersey Department of the Treasury and earlier, Senior Vice President at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, where he long played a leading role in the analysis and forecasts of the US economy.

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