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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Meade_Conflict
rdfs:label
Meade Conflict
rdfs:comment
Meade Conflict refers to a dilemma where an economy faces conflict between its internal and external balances. The phenomenon was proposed by the British economist and Nobel Prize Laurent James Meade in his influential book The Theory of International Economic Policy – The Balance of Payments (1951). Trevor Swan developed this problem into Swan diagram, which became more influential in the economic theory. The discovery has also led to other models such as Tinbergen's Rule.
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dbc:Macroeconomics
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59343896
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1118260674
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dbr:Inflation dbr:Monetary_policy dbr:James_Meade dbr:China dbr:Economic_policy dbr:Tinbergen's_Rule dbr:Fiscal_policy dbr:Nobel_Memorial_Prize_in_Economic_Sciences dbr:Trevor_Swan dbc:Macroeconomics dbr:Swan_diagram dbr:Economist
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dbo:abstract
Meade Conflict refers to a dilemma where an economy faces conflict between its internal and external balances. The phenomenon was proposed by the British economist and Nobel Prize Laurent James Meade in his influential book The Theory of International Economic Policy – The Balance of Payments (1951). Trevor Swan developed this problem into Swan diagram, which became more influential in the economic theory. The discovery has also led to other models such as Tinbergen's Rule.
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wikipedia-en:Meade_Conflict