5 datasets found
  1. w

    Books called Money talks : Alan Greenspan's free market rhetoric and the...

    • workwithdata.com
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    Work With Data, Books called Money talks : Alan Greenspan's free market rhetoric and the tragic legacy o by Geoffrey D. Klinger [Dataset]. https://www.workwithdata.com/dataset?entity=books&f=2&fcol0=author&fop0=includes&fval0=Geoffrey%20D.%20Klinger&fcol1=book&fop1=includes&fval1=Money%20talks%20:%20Alan%20Greenspan's%20free%20market%20rhetoric%20and%20the%20tragic%20legacy%20o
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    Dataset authored and provided by
    Work With Data
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    This dataset is about books and is filtered where the author includes Geoffrey D. Klinger and the book includes Money talks : Alan Greenspan's free market rhetoric and the tragic legacy o, featuring 7 columns including author, BNB id, book, book publisher, and ISBN. The preview is ordered by publication date (descending).

  2. H

    Data from: Sources of Blame Attribution: Citizen Attitudes Towards Public...

    • dataverse.harvard.edu
    • data.niaid.nih.gov
    Updated Jul 21, 2011
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    Neil Malhotra; Alexander Kuo (2011). Sources of Blame Attribution: Citizen Attitudes Towards Public Officials after 9/11 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/RXYFZQ
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    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    Jul 21, 2011
    Dataset provided by
    Harvard Dataverse
    Authors
    Neil Malhotra; Alexander Kuo
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Sep 11, 2001
    Area covered
    Arkansas, California, Maryland, Rhode Island, North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, Illinois, New Mexico, Wisconsin, North America
    Description

    When government fails, whom do citizens blame? The purpose of this study is to explore citizen attitudes regarding blame of intelligence officials for making America vulnerable to the attacks on 9/11. The study used a short Internet-based survey experiment to test whether party cues affect people’s attitudes about the responsibility of three government officials in making America vulnerable to the 9/11 attacks: CIA Director George Tenet, FBI Director Louis Freeh, and Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan. The survey was conducted by Knowledge Networks (KN) over the Internet in February 2007, using a nationally representative sample of 1015 American adults. KN recruits panel members over the telephone via random digit dialing (RDD) and provides them with WebTV equipment in exchange for their participation in weekly surveys, which they complete online. All Americans were sampled from the KN panel. Variables for this study can be divided into two general categories: demographic and feelings over 9/11. The feelings variables question the respondent about personal emotion connected to 9/11 and how much blame the respondent places on George Tenet, Louis Freeh, and Alan Greenspan. Finally, respondents were asked about the blame to place on additional federal, state, and local authorities.

  3. d

    CBS News Monthly Poll #2, May 1998

    • datamed.org
    • icpsr.umich.edu
    • +1more
    Updated Mar 21, 2011
    + more versions
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    CBS News (2011). CBS News Monthly Poll #2, May 1998 [Dataset]. https://datamed.org/display-item.php?repository=0025&id=59d52f7f5152c65187648fe9&query=
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 21, 2011
    Authors
    CBS News
    Description

    This poll, conducted May 19-21, 1998, is part of a continuing series of monthly surveys that solicit public opinion on the presidency and on a range of other political and social issues. Respondents were asked for their opinions of President Bill Clinton and his handling of the presidency, foreign policy, and the economy, as well as their views on the United States Congress, Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, Vice President Al Gore, Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan, Microsoft CEO Bill Gates, former President George Bush, former First Lady Barbara Bush, Texas Governor George W. Bush, and 1996 Florida gubernatorial candidate Jeb Bush. Those queried were asked a series of questions relating to the stock market and the Asian financial crisis, such as their impact on the respondent and on the United States economy. Related topics concerned respondents' investment management and sources of information on investments, including the Internet, and the respondents' opinions on the future of technology and automobile stocks. Respondents were also asked about their feelings toward different countries, especially India and Pakistan. A series of questions addressed the recent testing of nuclear bombs by India, including the importance of India's actions to the interests of the United States, possible United States responses, the possibility of Pakistan's conducting similar tests, and the likelihood of nuclear war in the next 15 years. Additional topics covered the November 1998 congressional elections, the anti-trust case brought by the United States government and 20 states against Microsoft, the Whitewater and Monica Lewinsky investigations involving President Clinton, computer access, electronic mail, and on-line polling. Background information on respondents includes age, race, ethnicity, sex, education, religion, family income, political party, political orientation, voter registration and participation history, age of children in household, stock market investments, and retirement savings plans.

  4. U

    Harris 1996 Business Week Senior Executives Survey, study no. 618195

    • dataverse.unc.edu
    • dataverse-staging.rdmc.unc.edu
    Updated Nov 30, 2007
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    UNC Dataverse (2007). Harris 1996 Business Week Senior Executives Survey, study no. 618195 [Dataset]. https://dataverse.unc.edu/dataset.xhtml;jsessionid=3772da0d14d827c6b79903242afb?persistentId=hdl%3A1902.29%2FH-618195&version=&q=&fileTypeGroupFacet=%22Text%22&fileAccess=Public
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    application/x-spss-por(22386), txt(43740), text/x-sas-syntax(11998), application/x-sas-transport(94000), pdf(169080), tsv(18809)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 30, 2007
    Dataset provided by
    UNC Dataverse
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    This survey focuses on America's senior executives ratings of the economy and their own companies performance, Alan Greenspan, President Clinton and Congress on the economy, and the balanced budget amendment. Variables include rating the economy, economic growth, inflation, 30 year Treasury rate, own company sales, employment, exports, Alan Greenspan, President Clinton handling of the economy, Congress, balanced budget amendment.

  5. The Great Moderation: inflation and real GDP growth in the U.S. 1985-2007

    • statista.com
    Updated Sep 2, 2024
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    Statista (2024). The Great Moderation: inflation and real GDP growth in the U.S. 1985-2007 [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/statistics/1345209/great-moderation-us-inflation-real-gdp/
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 2, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Time period covered
    1985 - 2007
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    During the period beginning roughly in the mid-1980s until the Global Financial Crisis (2007-2008), the U.S. economy experienced a time of relative economic calm, with low inflation and consistent GDP growth. Compared with the turbulent economic era which had preceded it in the 1970s and the early 1980s, the lack of extreme fluctuations in the business cycle led some commentators to suggest that macroeconomic issues such as high inflation, long-term unemployment and financial crises were a thing of the past. Indeed, the President of the American Economic Association, Professor Robert Lucas, famously proclaimed in 2003 that "central problem of depression prevention has been solved, for all practical purposes". Ben Bernanke, the future chairman of the Federal Reserve during the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) and 2022 Nobel Prize in Economics recipient, coined the term 'the Great Moderation' to describe this era of newfound economic confidence. The era came to an abrupt end with the outbreak of the GFC in the Summer of 2007, as the U.S. financial system began to crash due to a downturn in the real estate market.

    Causes of the Great Moderation, and its downfall

    A number of factors have been cited as contributing to the Great Moderation including central bank monetary policies, the shift from manufacturing to services in the economy, improvements in information technology and management practices, as well as reduced energy prices. The period coincided with the term of Fed chairman Alan Greenspan (1987-2006), famous for the 'Greenspan put', a policy which meant that the Fed would proactively address downturns in the stock market using its monetary policy tools. These economic factors came to prominence at the same time as the end of the Cold War (1947-1991), with the U.S. attaining a new level of hegemony in global politics, as its main geopolitical rival, the Soviet Union, no longer existed. During the Great Moderation, the U.S. experienced a recession twice, between July 1990 and March 1991, and again from March 2001 tom November 2001, however, these relatively short recessions did not knock the U.S. off its growth path. The build up of household and corporate debt over the early 2000s eventually led to the Global Financial Crisis, as the bursting of the U.S. housing bubble in 2007 reverberated across the financial system, with a subsequent credit freeze and mass defaults.

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Work With Data, Books called Money talks : Alan Greenspan's free market rhetoric and the tragic legacy o by Geoffrey D. Klinger [Dataset]. https://www.workwithdata.com/dataset?entity=books&f=2&fcol0=author&fop0=includes&fval0=Geoffrey%20D.%20Klinger&fcol1=book&fop1=includes&fval1=Money%20talks%20:%20Alan%20Greenspan's%20free%20market%20rhetoric%20and%20the%20tragic%20legacy%20o

Books called Money talks : Alan Greenspan's free market rhetoric and the tragic legacy o by Geoffrey D. Klinger

Explore at:
Dataset authored and provided by
Work With Data
License

Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically

Description

This dataset is about books and is filtered where the author includes Geoffrey D. Klinger and the book includes Money talks : Alan Greenspan's free market rhetoric and the tragic legacy o, featuring 7 columns including author, BNB id, book, book publisher, and ISBN. The preview is ordered by publication date (descending).

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