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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Harold_ColeHarold Cole - Wikipedia

    Harold Cole (24 January 1906 – 8 January 1946), also known as Harry Cole, Paul Cole, and many other aliases, was a petty criminal, a confidence man, a British soldier, an operative of the Pat O'Leary escape line, and an agent of Nazi Germany.

  2. James Joo-Jin Kim Professor of Economics. Editor, International Economic Review. Professor Cole also acts as a consultant for the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. His research covers a broad range of macroeconomic topics using a combination of theory, quantitative, and statistical methods.

  3. Harold Cole. Professor of Economics, University of Pennsylvania. Verified email at sas.upenn.edu. Macroeconomics International Economics. Articles Cited by Public access. Title. ... M Aguiar, S Chatterjee, H Cole, Z Stangebye. Handbook of macroeconomics 2, 1697-1755, 2016. 176: 2016: Incorporating concern for relative wealth into economic models.

  4. 31 de jul. de 2013 · The treacherous double agent Harold Cole was a petty criminal and fraudster even before the war. During the war he became one of the most notorious traitors of the Allied cause. His denunciations led to the arrest, imprisonment and death of many French patriots and Allied undercover agents.

  5. 31 de oct. de 2023 · The moniker “worst traitor of World War II” has not been handed to Harold Cole lightly. Cole first betrayed England, then his network of operatives and the French Resistance, followed by German intelligence, and finally the United States Army.

  6. Harold L. Cole, Lee E. Ohanian, New Deal Policies and the Persistence of the Great Depression: A General Equilibrium Analysis, Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 112, No. 4 (August 2004), pp. 779-816.

  7. In Monetary and Fiscal Policy Through a DSGE Lens, Harold L. Cole develops and extends versions of a classic quantitative model of economic growth to take on a wide range of topics in monetary and fiscal policy.