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Showing 1 to 15 of 32 results Save | Export
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Stroud, Mark – Journal of Education for Business, 2023
The purpose of this article is to provide guidance for instructors who wish to develop a course associated with student participation in the College Fed Challenge (CFC), an academic competition designed to test students' knowledge of current economic events and monetary policy. We eschew a lecture-only methodology and use small-group and…
Descriptors: Current Events, Economics, Monetary Systems, Cooperative Learning
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Jason van Tol – Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
Imagine what education would look like if upon completion every graduate was guaranteed a job paying a living wage, democratically created, doing meaningful work… This is a political possibility in most countries in the world today: Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) demonstrates that, provided a country has sovereignty over its currency, which most now…
Descriptors: Education Work Relationship, Monetary Systems, Relevance (Education), Conservation (Environment)
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Assan, Thomas E. B. – Africa Education Review, 2019
Classroom practitioners are expected to facilitate effective learning under the "Curriculum and Assessment Policy Statement" (CAPS) in South Africa. During this facilitation process, educators are required to become more resourceful in terms of their learning and teaching strategies. This article is based on a case study -- within the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Rural Schools, Rural Education, Educational Policy
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Vanderburg, Willem H. – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2009
This article attempts to make some sense of what is happening to the role of money and the economy in our lives and in our communities. It shows that the picture provided by the discipline of economics makes no sense at all. Corporations and national economies have become wealth extractors as opposed to wealth creators. Only about 3% of daily…
Descriptors: Economics, Monetary Systems, Corporations, Financial Support
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Higham, David – Economics, 1983
Floating exchange rates have not lived up to all expectations, but neither have they performed as badly as some critics have suggested. Examined are the impact of floating rates on balance of payments adjustment, domestic economic policy, and inflation and the claim that floating rates have displayed excessive fluctuations. (Author/RM)
Descriptors: Economics, Inflation (Economics), Monetary Systems
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Friedman, Milton – Journal of Economic Education, 1983
Examined are the quantity theory of money and the recent application of monetary policy in Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States. In all three countries, the reduction of monetary growth has reduced inflation. (Author/RM)
Descriptors: Economic Climate, Economic Factors, Economics, Inflation (Economics)
Samuels, Howard J. – USA Today, 1983
The 1983 federal fiscal crisis has been created by a decade of excessive monetarist policy. Why so costly and destructive a policy has commanded the allegiance of economists and governments throughout the world is discussed. (RM)
Descriptors: Economic Climate, Economics, Finance Reform, Inflation (Economics)
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James, Stephen – Economics, 1986
Exchange controls in Great Britain were abolished in 1979. Since then, there has been a significant outflow of capital. This article examines the case for the reintroduction of controls with particular reference to the effect this might have on investment. (Author/JDH)
Descriptors: Business Administration, Economics, Economics Education, Government Role
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Thornton, Mark; And Others – Journal of Economic Education, 1991
Presents a teaching model that is consistent with the traditional approach to demonstrating the expansion and contraction of the money supply. Suggests that the model provides a simple and convenient visual image of changes in the monetary system. Describes the model as juxtaposing the behavior of the moneyholding public with that of the…
Descriptors: Banking, Business Cycles, Economics, Economics Education
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Caldwell, Jean; O'Driscoll, Timothy G. – Social Education, 2007
Economists and historians have struggled for almost 80 years to account for the American Great Depression, which began in 1929 and lasted until the early years of World War II. In this article, the authors discuss three major schools of thought on the causes of the Great Depression and the long failure of the American economy to return to full…
Descriptors: Historians, Unemployment, Economics, United States History
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Appleyard, Dennis R.; Field, Alfred J., Jr. – Journal of Economic Education, 1986
Of interest to teachers of intermediate courses in international economics, this article provides a simple technique for teaching the effect of devaluation on a country's trade balance. (Author/JDH)
Descriptors: Economics, Economics Education, Higher Education, International Trade
Phillips, James A. – Community College Social Science Journal, 1978
Hypothesizes that: (1) there is much public distrust of business profit-making due to lack of economic education and misunderstanding of business profits; (2) social scientists should study such attitudes and investigate profits; and (3) conflicts between profit-making and government intervention for social goals are inevitable and must be better…
Descriptors: Business, Economic Climate, Economics, Economics Education
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Gaske, Dan – Journal of Economic Education, 1992
Provides a graphical framework for presenting interactions among current account flows, capital account flows, and exchange rates. Suggests that the two type of flows must be considered separately in discussions of foreign exchange equilibrium and balance of payments flows. Supplies sample graphs and instructions for applying the framework to real…
Descriptors: Banking, Capital, Economics, Economics Education
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Gamble, Ralph C., Jr. – Journal of Economic Education, 1991
Describes graphical techniques to help explain the multiple creation of deposits that accompany lending in a fractional reserve banking system. Presents a model that emphasizes the banking system, the interaction of total permitted, required, and excess reserves and deposits. Argues that the approach simplifies information to examining a slope…
Descriptors: Banking, Business Administration Education, Economics, Economics Education
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Wennerlind, Carl – Journal of Political Economy, 2005
David Hume's monetary theory has been controversial since its formulation. Lately, the focus has been on Hume's alleged misapplication of the quantity theory of money. While he appears to subscribe to a simple quantity theory with money neutrality, in a famously contested passage in the essay Of Money, he violates the neutrality condition by…
Descriptors: Political Science, Economics, Policy Formation, Public Policy
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