Word: sprinkel
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...belief that the money supply will grow somewhere around 5% a year. They disagree most sharply not about what is likely to happen but about whether the U.S. could do better. Most argue that the nation could safely pursue somewhat more expansionary policies. In lonely dissent, Beryl Sprinkel replies: "If we say, 'We've got lots of slack, so go, man,' we will wind up a year from now moving toward full employment. But inflation will be rekindled, and we will go down one more time." Thus if inflation resumes, the nation will have to go through...
...seekers. They include growing numbers of youngsters reaching working age, women who think that their place is not" only in the home, and servicemen returning from Viet Nam. Though they speak for different schools of economics, TIME Board of Economists Members Walter Heller and Beryl Sprinkel join in predicting a rise in the jobless rate from 4.7% in June to 51% or 6% by late...
...quicker and greater increase in money than Burns apparently has in mind if the Administration is to head off a recession. Milton Friedman's followers argue that it takes six to nine months for any switch in monetary policy to make its impact felt on the economy. Beryl Sprinkel, vice president of Chicago's Harris Trust & Savings Bank and a member of TIME'S Board of Economists, calculates that industrial production is likely to drop an additional 4% even if the Federal Reserve begins now to expand money supply at a 5% annual rate, and that...
...Beryl W. Sprinkel, senior vice president and economist, Harris Trust and Savings Bank, Chicago...
...dissent, Beryl Sprinkel argues that the leading indicators "have never been any weaker in modern times," judging by the percentage that are going down v. the percentage still rising. He forecasts a recession at least as severe...