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staircase curve English

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staircase curve English » English

notch curve

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With inflation - both headline and core - now on an accelerating path, Asian central banks can't afford to slip further behind the curve.
Moreover, these bonds are priced as spreads on the government-bond yield curve, implying that QE will have an immediate impact on enterprises' financing costs.
Pessimistic Europeans are behind the curve.
And we are far behind the curve: Because we have been so slow to respond to climate change, achieving the targeted limit of a two-degree (centigrade) rise in global temperature, will require sharp reductions in emissions in the future.
For starters, the same forces that led to an upward shift in the global savings curve will soon enough begin operating in the other direction.
Demand for consumer products typically follows an S-curve.
This strategy needs to be inverted - and Greece offers a real opportunity to get ahead of the curve.
Getting ahead of the curve will give Greece a realistic chance of controlling its own destiny.
But such a policy diminishes, and may even eliminate, financiers' ability to take the easy route by riding the duration yield curve for profits.
After all, the potential effect of interest-rate hikes on the US yield curve has a major impact on the pricing of all global assets.
But three factors suggest that investors are over-emphasizing the risk of a curve re-pricing.
Under its capable managing director, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the Fund has been one of the few official agencies ahead of - instead of behind - the curve.
Yet unless the rising curve of annual emissions can be reversed, the CO2 concentration will irrevocably reach a truly threatening level.
With policy rates at or close to double-digit levels in many of those economies, the authorities are not behind the curve the way they were in 2013.
So far, the US response appears to be more aggressive than that of the euro zone, as the European Central Bank falls behind the curve on interest rates and the EU's fiscal stance remains weak.
In economic jargon, the supply curve of labor was flat but is now sloping upward, so that rapidly increasing demand for labor resulting from rapid growth is driving up wages.
Data presented by Roger Pielke in the Natural Hazards Review in February shows that actual insured losses caused by the most important hurricanes since 1900 followed a U-shaped curve.
As soon as economic activity in the United States revives, interest rates on government bonds are liable to shoot up; indeed, the yield curve is likely to steepen in anticipation.
This is more appropriate to the task of reducing carbon emissions than a single price, because there is a multiplicity of sectors and methods, each of which produces a different cost curve.
Of course, governments cannot always be ahead of the curve.

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