Search: year-average growth
RBA Glossary definition for year-average growth
year-average growth – The rate of change between the year and the previous year, where the year is typically a calendar year or a financial year. For example 'year-average growth 2011/12' means the percentage change between the financial year 2010/11 and the financial year 2011/12. It can also be referred to as 'growth in the year'.
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Wrap-up Discussion
3 Jan 2007
Conferences
PDF
133KB
RBA Conference Volume 2006
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2006/pdf/wrap-up-disc-2006.pdf
Securitisation and the Commercial Property Cycle
10 Dec 2012
Conferences
PDF
1300KB
RBA Conference Volume 2012
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2012/pdf/packer-riddiough.pdf
China's Institutional Impediments to Productivity Growth | Conference – 2016
18 Mar 2016
Conferences
TFP in Services I and II has been declining since the late 1980s, whereas Services III have experienced nearly zero TFP growth on average. ... The estimated aggregate TFP growth is 0.83 per cent per annum on average.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2016/wu.html
Openness and Growth | Conference – 1994
11 Jul 1994
Conferences
These new growth theories are contrasted with the conventional static models of trade. ... The standard explanatory variables are the growth of capital intensity, captured by the average investment share over the period, I/Y, and the growth of employment,
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1994/dowrick.html
Low Wage Growth
4 Apr 2019
Conference
–
2019
The Reserve Bank of Australia 2019 conference, ‘Low Wage Growth’
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2019/
The Determinants of Long-Run Growth | Conference – 1995
10 Jul 1995
Conferences
Both of these patterns are evident from Figure 1, which displays decade average rates of growth for major geographic and development groupings. ... As more and more economies slide down the technology-gap curve in Figure 5, average rates of growth have
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1995/dowrick.html
What Went Right in the 1990s? Sources of American and Prospects for World Economic Growth | Conference – 2000
21 Jun 1990
Conferences
But actual measured growth in the US economy over the 1990s averaged more than 3.4 per cent per year. ... zero. Second, conventionally calibrated Solow growth models predict a marginal product of capital on the order of 10 per cent per year.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2000/delong.html
Labour-Productivity Growth and Relative Wages: 1978–1994 | Conference – 1995
31 Dec 1978
Conferences
If these unemployed workers find jobs, this is likely to slow productivity growth as, on average, the new workers will be producing less output than the existing workers. ... In terms of productivity growth, the real difference appears in the third year.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1995/lowe.html
Growth in East Asia: What We Can and What We Cannot Infer From It | Conference – 1995
10 Jul 1995
Conferences
One simple reading of these results can show why these growth rates, sustained over a 30-year period, are simply amazing: while the average resident of a non-Asian country in ... Table 2 reports the results of regressing average growth of income per
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1995/sarel.html
Macroeconomic Policies and Growth | Conference – 1995
10 Jul 1995
Conferences
2.80. 1.8. 1.70. Note: μ denotes average growth of GDP and σ standard deviations of growth rates for the periods concerned. ... In all three countries, average growth fell sharply and this, combined with the weakening of enterprise saving, obviously
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1995/andersen-gruen.html