Attention to federal activity in credit markets is typically focused on the government's role as a borrower. In contrast, scant attention is paid to its equally large and dominant role as a lender. This paper evaluates the aggregate impact of federal lending activity within the framework of a vector autoregressive representation of the US macroeconomy. The empirical regularities uncovered suggest that aggregate federal lending activity does not have a net positive impact on output.
SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC CONDITIONS OF THE KOSOVA SERBS IN THE 19TH CENTURY AND EARLY 20TH CENTURY: DE LA PROPRIETE TERRIENNE AUX BANQUES,
1988,
588
: 235
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336