Posts tagged Misc
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The Rumors Are Wrong: Private Equity Still Outperforms
In the investment world, few debates have grown as intense—or as consequential—as the one surrounding the long-term performance of private equity (PE). A growing number of analysts, including a high-profile paper by Ilmanen, Chandra, and McQuinn from AQR, have argued that the golden age of private equity may be over. According to them, net-of-fee returns from private equity no longer provide the edge they once did over public equities. Instead, they suggest that investors are increasingly drawn to private equity for its return-smoothing features, rather than for genuine alpha.
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Glitter Isn’t Gold: How the Gold Standard Fails Modern Economics
To many, gold is the ultimate symbol of stability. So why not tie our money to it again? Because when we did, it wrecked the economy — over and over again.
The Allure of Gold: A False Promise
In times of financial uncertainty, calls to “return to the gold standard” often resurface, echoing from op-eds, political campaigns, and even corners of social media. On the surface, the idea sounds responsible, even noble: tie your nation’s currency to a fixed amount of gold, and suddenly you’ve imposed discipline. No more reckless money printing, no more runaway inflation, no more economic meddling.
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When House Prices Rise, Birth Rates Fall (and Rise): A Tale of Two Households
“Why aren’t young people having kids?”
It’s a question that economists, demographers, and policymakers have been grappling with for years. We often hear explanations that point to rising student debt, changing gender norms, delayed marriage, or even lifestyle preferences. But a groundbreaking paper by economists Lisa J. Dettling and Melissa Schettini Kearney titled “House Prices and Birth Rates: The Impact of the Real Estate Market on the Decision to Have a Baby” adds another powerful force into the conversation — housing.
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The Phoenix Effect: How Portugal, Italy, Greece, and Spain Defied Expectations in the Eurozone
1. Introduction
In the formative years of the Eurozone, four Southern European economies—Portugal, Italy, Greece, and Spain—gained notoriety under the derogatory acronym “PIGS.” Their economic woes were widely seen as emblematic of the dangers of monetary integration without fiscal union. Critics pointed to unsustainable debt levels, bloated public sectors, and underwhelming productivity. The sovereign debt crisis that erupted after 2009 seemed to confirm this pessimism, as these countries experienced plummeting GDP, soaring unemployment, and financial bailouts that came with harsh austerity measures. For a time, the “PIGS” narrative dominated discourse about the fragility of the European project.
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