This International Bank notes newsletter includes some of the following headings: The new year honours; St. Patrick and the city of Armagh; the World Bank in Kenya; what number did you call please; a winter...
This International Bank notes newsletter includes some of the following headings: Olympic Games 1956, by Grabame W. Keep; new professional staff - October; Olympic festival in ancient Greece, by Rena Zafiriou;...
The annual economic review by the council of economic advisers of January 1952 assumes that the total maintenance cost of forces planned, plus the atomic energy program, will be in the general range of...
Since the end of the war the world economy has been dominated by three major issues: the maintenance of stability in the American economy, the restoration of equilibrium in the European external position...
This is the third in the series of reports in which the economic commission for Europe is attempting every year to make a comprehensive survey of the European economy. The coverage of Eastern Europe is...
One of the most significant developments in 1949 has been the general realization that Europe's dependence on American assistance is not being reduced at the rate necessary to make the region self-supporting...
The report consists of four parts: part one attempts to estimate the world's needs for investment, international and domestic. Part two summarizes the available information in investment activities in...
This is the fourth of a series of memoranda whose object is to present a general picture of major economic developments in the world, together with an appraisal and interpretation of their significance...
The economic commission for Europe has again made a valuable contribution to the appraisal of European economic developments. Its 'economic survey for 1948' offers to the public a wealth of data so skillfully...
The most urgent problem which today faces Europe is to restore equilibrium to its external accounts and become independent of American aid at the earliest possible moment. If this interpretation of what...