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On the Existence of a Keynesian Equilibrium

Review of Economic Studies 1968 35(3), 327
Journal Article On the Existence of a Keynesian Equilibrium Get access E. Glustoff E. Glustoff University of Washington Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Review of Economic Studies, Volume 35, Issue 3, July 1968, Pages 327–334, https://doi.org/10.2307/2296665 Published: 01 July 1968

Monthly Moving Averages--An Effective Investment Tool?

Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 1968 3(3), 315
F. E. James, Jr., Monthly Moving Averages--An Effective Investment Tool?, The Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, Vol. 3, No. 3, Special Issue: Random Walk Hypothesis (Sep., 1968), pp. 315-326

Continuous Financial Processes

Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 1968 3(2), 113
The arithmetic formulas appearing in the mathematics of finance are practically useless unless one has available either excellent tables and infinite patience, or working computer programs, a machine, and a budget. The present article shows how a number of useful topics in this area can be dealt with effectively by the more tractable mathematics of continuous processes. The methods yield approximate answers of high quality, and in some cases exact answers as well, with small effort, and have obvious applications in “truth in lending” investigations.

Israel and the European Economic Community

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1968 82(2), 297
I. Nature of the problem, 297. — II. Effect of the EEC on the Israeli economy, 300; citrus fruits, 300; other agricultural products, 307; industrial products, 307; welfare effects, 308. — III. Possible benefits from an association with the EEC, 310.

Adjusting for Risk in the Capital Budget of a Growth-Oriented Company

Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 1968 3(4), 445
Although the importance of evaluating the risk of potential investments has long been recognized, only recently have formulations been developed to include risk as an explicit variable in the decision-making process. The considerable progress being made in this area, both in theory and in application, is attested to by the number and variety of contributions to the literature.