Aggregate Supply, Aggregate Demand, and Income Distribution in Ireland: A Macrosectoral AnalysisEconomic analysis of the relationship between aggregate supply and demand and income distribution in Ireland - applies macroeconomics evaluation techniques; examines production functions, production factors and production capacity in various economic sectors; discusses capital worker ratio, consumer expenditure, public expenditure, capital investment in residential construction and inventory build-up, economic implications of income redistribution policies, etc. Bibliography, diagrams, graphs, statistical tables. |
Contents
General Summary | 1 |
REVIEW OF OBJECTIVES AND METHODS | 13 |
THE MACROSECTORAL DATA FRAMEWORK | 36 |
Copyright | |
15 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
adjustment aggregate agricultural sector analysis approach assumed assumption average behaviour capacity output capacity utilisation capital stock Central Bank changes Chapter Cobb-Douglas coefficient components consumption consumption function decision Deflator derived disaggregated disposable income domestic credit domestic production Dublin econometric Economic and Social economy-wide elasticity empirical employment equilibrium estimated examined expenditure exports factor inputs factor prices financing fiscal foreign framework Geary gross domestic gross domestic product gross output growth Hence imports income distribution indirect taxes industry sector inflation investment Ireland Irish economy labour supply long-run macroeconomic measure migration monetary money supply national accounts non-agricultural Notation OLS regressions overall PCPER Phillips curve PMGS population price equations production function ratio real wage relationship relative prices returns to scale service sector short-run small open economy Social Research Institute Social Review specific statistical structure Table theoretical value-added Walsh