04435oam 22010214 450 991097334500332120250426110808.0978661382047197814623326631462332668978145272896414527289689781282392045128239204297814519084281451908423(CKB)3360000000443087(EBL)3014565(SSID)ssj0001477232(PQKBManifestationID)11812515(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001477232(PQKBWorkID)11452432(PQKB)10792606(OCoLC)246925337(IMF)WPIEE2006046(CaOOCEL)250996(MiAaPQ)EBC3014565(IMF)WPIEA2006046(CaBNVSL)gtp00528131(VaAlCD)20.500.12592/b08qt6WPIEA2006046(EXLCZ)993360000000443087250996CaOOCEL(Public Documents)20020129d2006 uf 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrHow Different Is the Cyclical Behavior of Home Production Across Countries? /Ayhan Kose, William Blankenau1st ed.Washington, D.C. :International Monetary Fund,2006.1 online resource (32 p.)IMF Working Papers"February 2006."9781451863062 1451863063 Includes bibliographical references.""Contents""; ""I. INTRODUCTION""; ""II. THE MODEL""; ""III. DATA""; ""IV. PARAMETER CALIBRATION""; ""V. RESULTS""; ""VI. CONCLUSION""; ""References""This paper studies stylized business cycle properties of household production in four industrialized countries (Canada, the United States, Germany, and Japan). We employ a dynamic small open economy business cycle model that incorporates a household production sector. We use the model to generate data on home output, hours worked in the home sector, and hours spent on leisure. We find that in each country, home output is more volatile than market output while home sector hours are about as volatile as those in the market sector. In each country, leisure is the least volatile series. Leisure hours and home hours are countercyclical in all countries, and home output is not highly correlated with market output. Home sector variables are generally less persistent than market variables, and cross-country correlations related to home production tend to be lower than those related to market production. These findings demonstrate that despite some well-known structural differences in labor markets, the cyclical features of home sector variables are similar across the countries we consider.IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ;No. 2006/046HouseholdsEconomic aspectsCanadaHouseholdsEconomic aspectsUnited StatesHouseholdsEconomic aspectsGermanyHouseholdsEconomic aspectsJapanAutocorrelationIptcncBusiness cycleIptcncCobb-douglas production functionIptcncCorrelation and dependenceIptcncEconomicsIptcncEconomyIptcncEndogeneity (econometrics)IptcncFinancial marketIptcncLabour economicsIptcncLogarithmIptcncHouseholdsEconomic aspectsHouseholdsEconomic aspectsHouseholdsEconomic aspectsHouseholdsEconomic aspectsAutocorrelationBusiness cycleCobb-douglas production functionCorrelation and dependenceEconomicsEconomyEndogeneity (econometrics)Financial marketLabour economicsLogarithm306.850973Kose Ayhan1815765Blankenau William1815766International Monetary Fund.DcWaIMFBOOK9910973345003321How Different Is the Cyclical Behavior of Home Production Across Countries4371269UNINA04194nam 2200709Ia 450 991096942090332120251117083817.01-136-51758-81-280-66246-897866136393941-136-51759-60-203-15150-X10.4324/9780203151501 (CKB)2670000000203522(EBL)958257(OCoLC)798532062(SSID)ssj0000676812(PQKBManifestationID)11402785(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000676812(PQKBWorkID)10684774(PQKB)11585546(OCoLC)797831310(Au-PeEL)EBL958257(CaPaEBR)ebr10566633(CaONFJC)MIL363939(OCoLC)795706828(MiAaPQ)EBC958257(PPN)198454260(EXLCZ)99267000000020352220090618d2010 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrCrisis and beyond re-evaluating Pakistan /editor, Naveeda Khan1st ed.New Delhi ;London Routledge20101 online resource (604 p.)Critical Asian studiesDescription based upon print version of record.0-415-48063-9 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover; Beyond Crisis: Re-evaluating Pakistan; Copyright; Contents; Glossary; Foreword; Acknowledgements; Introduction; Part I Artificiality of the State; 1 Towards a Lyric History of India; 2 The Politics of Commensuration: The Violence of Partition and the Making of the Pakistani State; 3 A Real Terrorist; 4 Reimagining the 'Land of the Pure': A Sufi Master Reclaims Islamic Orthodoxy and Pakistani Identity; Part II The Difficulty of Nationalist Visions; 5 Registering Crisis: Ethnicity in Pakistani Cinema of the 1960s and 1970s6 Listening to the Enemy: The Pakistan Army, Violence and Memories of 19717 Strength of the State Meets the Strength of the Street: The 1972 Labour Struggle in Karachi; 8 Jama'at-e-Islami Pakistan: Learning from the Left; Part III Foreignness Within; 9 The Paradoxes of Ahmadiyya Identity: Legal Appropriation of Muslim-ness and the Construction of Ahmadiyya Difference; 10 Words that Wound: Archiving Hate in the Making of Hindu-Indian and Muslim-Pakistani Publics in Bombay; 11 Itineraries of Conversion: Judaic Paths to a Muslim Pakistan; 12 Iqbal and Karbala; Part IV The Everyday13 Look Who's Talking Now: Voice and Authority in Pakistani Shi'i Women's Gatherings14 Madrasa Metrics: The Statistics and Rhetoric of Religious Enrolment in Pakistan; 15 Uncivil Politics and the Appropriation of Planning in Islamabad; 16 Mosque Construction or the Violence of the Ordinary; Afterwords; Living the Tensions of the State, the Nation and Everyday Life; Anthropology and the Pakistani National Imaginary; Bibliography; Note on the Editor; Notes on Contributors; IndexThrough the essays in this volume, we see how the failure of the state becomes a moment to ruminate on the artificiality of this most modern construct, the failure of nationalism, an opportunity to dream of alternative modes of association, and the failure of sovereignty to consider the threats and possibilities of the realm of foreignness within the nation-state as within the self. The ambition of this volume is not only to complicate standing representations of Pakistan. It is take Pakistan out of the status of exceptionalism that its multiple crises have endowed upon it. By now, mCritical Asian studies (New Delhi, India)Religion and politicsPakistanPakistanHistoryPakistanPolitics and governmentPakistanSocial conditionsReligion and politics954.91Khan Naveeda Ahmed1969-1359262MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910969420903321Crisis and beyond4491534UNINA