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This suggests that compensation rises in something like lockstep.
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Young people and older people, women and men, immigrants and the native-born all saw their incomes rise in something like lockstep.
Friedman also later argued that inflation and unemployment could rise in tandem — something Keynesians saw as conceptually impossible, because they believed that higher inflation caused lower unemployment, and vice versa, and it was government's job to strike the perfect balance between these two conflicting forces.
Palm oil and many other commodities like fossil fuels demonstrate perfectly the rising concern with a flaw in something around which the economy trustingly, and often unthinkingly, pivots – the price mechanism.
This bias, often unnoticed because it is assumed to be a self-evident sane view of the world — rather like believing that the sun rises in the east — can have something of a stifling effect on the dimensions of academic dialogue.
Pharrell performed "Happy" in something resembling a bellhop outfit, giving rise to a thousand Grand Budapest Pharrell tweets.
Tax bills simply rise in sync with something else like income, property or sales.
The risk is of a rise in yields to something like the historical norm of 4-6% and a fall in price that will translate into a negative return.
What could drive default rates up sooner is a rise in interest rates, something that Professor Altman views as inevitable despite the federal government's interventions.
So even if productivity is increasing and that is not clear on its own it is not enough.And what if the slower rise in yields reflects something more fundamental, the approach of some sort of biological limit in plants?
Last week Joan Bakewell was found "loosely speculating" that narcissism was so rife among social media-obsessed young people that it could be linked to the rise in eating disorders, something for which she quickly apologised after there was a backlash of criticism from affected young people and their families.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com