365 results
Search Results
52. FIRM SIZES AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT: ESTIMATING LONG-TERM EFFECTS ON U.S. COUNTY GROWTH, 1990-2000.
- Author
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Komarek, Timothy and Loveridge, Scott
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,BUSINESS size ,EMPLOYMENT ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP - Abstract
ABSTRACT This paper investigates the role of the business size distribution on income and employment growth in U.S. counties from 1990 to 2000. We measure the business size distribution as the share of employees across nine establishment size categories that range from microfirms (one to four employees) to large firms (1,000+ employees) and using three indices similar to a Gini coefficient. Results show that the business size distribution has a significant impact on county-level growth patterns. Employment shares in small firms increase employment growth, but decrease income growth. One possible conclusion suggests policies emphasizing small firms and entrepreneurship during times of high unemployment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
53. The Role of the University as an Agent of Regional Economic Development.
- Author
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Bagchi-Sen, Sharmistha and Smith, Helen Lawton
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,POLICY sciences ,RESEARCH universities & colleges ,OUTCOME-based education ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP - Abstract
Universities are commonly seen by policy makers as being key actors in the knowledge-based economy. In the United States, universities, but particularly research universities, have been the focus of many studies which have sought to document and explain the commercial impact of university-based research on regional economies. For example, studies have analyzed the extent and outcomes of academic entrepreneurship and of university-industry collaborations. The focus of this paper is to review this literature with a specific focus on contradictory and inconclusive results. Data for these studies are obtained from a number of sources such as self-administered surveys, patent office, the National Science Foundation and the Association of University Technology Managers. This paper reviews the literature and highlights the variety of conceptual frameworks, data, and methodology used. It has a specific focus on assessing impact over time as well the difficulty in generalizing the result obtained from one study to another context. In spite of these problems, the evidence from a broad range and increasing volume of literature on trends and characteristics of academic entrepreneurship and university-industry collaborations shows that universities indisputably play a major role in their regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
54. The Dollar Shortage in Global Banking and the International Policy Response The Dollar Shortage in Global Banking and the International Policy Response.
- Author
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McGuire, Patrick and von Peter, Goetz
- Subjects
GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 ,BANKING industry ,U.S. dollar ,CENTRAL banking industry ,ECONOMIC policy ,ECONOMIC development ,FINANCIAL statements - Abstract
Among the policy responses to the global financial crisis, the international provision of US dollars via central bank swap lines stands out. This paper studies the build-up of stresses on banks' balance sheets that led to this coordinated policy response. We reconstruct the worldwide consolidated balance sheets of the major national banking systems to investigate the structure of their global operations across offices worldwide, shedding light on how their international asset positions were funded across currencies and counterparties. The analysis shows how the growth in European banks' US dollar assets produced structural US dollar funding needs, setting the stage for the global dollar shortage when interbank and swap markets became impaired. We demonstrate that such vulnerabilities are best measured along the contours of banks' consolidated balance sheets, rather than along national borders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
55. Code of ethics quality: an international comparison of corporate staff support and regulation in Australia, Canada and the United States.
- Author
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Callaghan, Michael, Wood, Greg, Payan, Janice M., Singh, Jang, and Svensson, Göran
- Subjects
CODES of ethics ,BUSINESS ethics ,SOCIAL development ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The objective of this paper is to examine the ' Code of Ethics Quality' ( CEQ) in the largest companies of Australia, Canada and the United States. For this purpose, a proposed CEQ construct has been applied. It appears from the empirical findings that while Australia, Canada and the United States are extremely similar in their economic and social development, there may well be distinct cultural mores and issues that are forming their business ethics practices. A research implication derived from the performed research is that the construct provides a selection of observable and measurable elements in the context of CEQ. The construct of CEQ consists of nine measures divided into two dimensions (i.e. staff support and regulation). They should not be seen as a complete list. On the contrary, it is encouraged that others propose and elaborate revisions and extensions. A practical implication of this paper is a structure of what and how to examine the CEQ in a managerial setting. It may assist companies in their efforts to establish, maintain and improve their ethical culture, norms and beliefs within the organization and supporting them in their ethical business practices with different stakeholders in the marketplace and society. The dimensions and measures of the construct may be used as a frame of reference for further research. They may be useful and applicable across contexts and over time using similar samples when it comes to large companies, as small- or medium-sized ones may not have considered all areas nor have the elements in place. This is a research limitation, but it provides an opportunity for further research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
56. THE IMPACT OF ANTI-TERRORISM EXPENDITURE ON ECONOMIC GROWTH AND WELFARE.
- Author
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Yang, Cheng-Lang, Lin, Hung-Pin, and Chen, Chien-Yuan
- Subjects
FINANCING of counterterrorism ,FEDERAL aid to terrorism prevention ,ECONOMIC development ,GROWTH rate ,PUBLIC spending ,UNITED States politics & government, 2009-2017 ,UNITED States economy, 2009-2017 - Abstract
ABSTRACT This paper examines the effects of increasing anti-terrorism expenditure on economic growth rate and social welfare. It is shown that: (i) spending the least amount possible on anti-terrorism expenditure will lead to a maximum economic growth rate; and (ii) to achieve maximum social welfare, the government should allocate its budget to anti-terrorism expenditure. The results shed light on why the US government has chosen to uphold and pursue its anti-terrorism policies in recent years to present day. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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57. Multidimensional Re-creation of Vulnerabilities and Potential for Resilience in International Migration.
- Author
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Julca, Alex
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LABOR mobility ,ECONOMIC impact of emigration & immigration ,POVERTY ,ECONOMIC development ,LABOR supply ,CLIMATE change ,REMITTANCES ,UNITED States emigration & immigration - Abstract
International labour migration is a multidimensional process and primarily a family mechanism intended to reduce vulnerabilities associated with underlying inequalities. However, for immigrants, the break-up of physical contact with family members is an enduring feature of vulnerability in their communication with origins (often in developing countries). On the whole, family relationships are transformed: the absence of physical contact is traded-off with remittances sent home to family members. Remittances create potential for resilience by increasing human development of children, while reducing extreme poverty at the local level. Remittance flows are also an important source of foreign exchange for countries of origin. However, labour markets' polarization, backlash, and economic downturns at destinations (often in developed countries), and governments' moral hazard, currency revaluation, and production inertia at origins recreate vulnerabilities and disrupt the potential build-up of resilience. In fact, the re-creation of vulnerabilities largely outweighs the generation of resilience threads. The paper develops a typology that highlights the dynamic interaction between vulnerabilities and resilience, revealing the multiple aspects of people and remittances flows, the potential for mainstreaming migration policies into economic development, and the scale of the policy task to reduce vulnerabilities associated to international labour migration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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58. OFFSHORING PRODUCTION: A SIMPLE MODEL OF WAGES, PRODUCTIVITY, AND GROWTH.
- Author
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DAVIS, COLIN and NAGHAVI, ALIREZA
- Subjects
OFFSHORE outsourcing ,LABOR productivity ,ECONOMIC development ,LABOR market ,FINANCIAL liberalization ,HETEROGENEITY ,REAL wages ,UNITED States manufacturing industries ,GLOBALIZATION ,GROSS domestic product ,MATHEMATICAL models - Abstract
We examine the relationship between offshoring and the labor market in an occupational choice model of trade and endogenous growth where workers are employed on the basis of their individual skill levels. Trade liberalization leads to offshoring and reduces employment in the manufacturing sector. Displaced workers move into traditional and innovation sectors according to their skill levels, shaping real wages and aggregate productivity in the manufacturing sector. The paper aims to show how inter-sectoral labor market adjustments, highlighted by skill heterogeneity, could be a possible explanation for the simultaneous rise in productivity and reduction in real wages that have coincided with the sharp escalation of offshoring activities in the U.S. manufacturing sector since 2004. ( JEL F16, F23, J24) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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59. KUZNETS HYPOTHESIS IN A PANEL OF STATES.
- Author
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KIM, DONG-HYEON, HUANG, HO-CHUAN, and LIN, SHU-CHIN
- Subjects
INCOME inequality ,ECONOMIC development ,POLARIZATION (Social sciences) ,ECONOMIC equilibrium ,MATHEMATICAL models of economics ,VOCATIONAL guidance - Abstract
This paper uses a new comprehensive cross-state panel for the United States over the 1945-2004 period to reassess the relationship between income inequality and economic development. By employing the pooled mean group estimator of , it detects a long-run cointegrating association between inequality and development (as well as its squared term). Moreover, their relationship is better characterized by a U shape rather than the inverted-U profile asserted by . The evidence is robust to a variety of sensitivity tests. ( JEL C14, C21, O11, O15) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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60. Agglomeration Potential: The Spatial Scale of Industry Linkages in the Southern California Economy.
- Author
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FUNDERBURG, RICHARD G. and BOARNET, MARLON G.
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL concentration ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC indicators ,INDUSTRIES ,MANUFACTURING industries ,LEGAL pluralism ,METROPOLITAN areas ,FACTOR analysis - Abstract
Targeting industry clusters for economic development has become popular despite the lack of empirical evidence about the spatial scales over which various clusters agglomerate. This paper identifies twenty manufacturing industry clusters from a principal components analysis of interindustry patterns of trade and measures the spatial employment concentration of each cluster's plants within a polycentric framework. Two to eight centers of employment concentration are detected within the Southern California region for each set of trade linkages. Our spatial half-life measure reveals that half of a cluster's employment in associated establishments is located within a typical range of eight to twelve kilometers (about 5–7.5 miles) to the nearest employment center or subcenter for the particular cluster. Furthermore, employment in seventeen of the twenty clusters is found to be more spatially concentrated than manufacturing employment as a whole, suggesting that geographic proximity is important to interindustry linkages in the Southern California economy. More important, the spatial concentration across industry clusters varies considerably within the metropolitan area, implying that economic development practitioners should consider local context and adapt industry cluster theories to the specific advantages and disadvantages of their immediate locality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
61. US and EU experiences of tax incentives.
- Author
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Liard-Muriente, Carlos F
- Subjects
TAX incentive policy ,ECONOMIC policy ,REGIONAL economics ,LABOR incentives ,ECONOMIC forecasting ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to shed light on the controversial issue of regional development incentives. Although extensive research has been conducted, a review of the literature gives an inconclusive answer to whether economic incentives are effective. Why do researchers arrive at different conclusions, even after analysing the same programmes? Among the problems that we find, for example, is the fact that for some researchers ‘effective’ means the significant location of new firms in targeted areas, while for others the creation of jobs regardless of whether new firms are arriving in a significant fashion. Furthermore, as we elaborate, the selection of an econometric model will have a significant impact on expected results. Different models, with different limitations, will lead researchers to evaluate the same incentive programme but arrive at different conclusions regarding its effectiveness. The contribution of the paper is to inform policymakers about the potential opportunities and pitfalls when designing incentive strategies. This is particularly relevant, given that both the US and Europe have been promoting incentives as a tool for regional economic development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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62. T.W. Schultz's Contributions to the Economic Analysis of U.S. Agriculture.
- Author
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Gardner, Bruce L.
- Subjects
AGRICULTURAL economics ,ECONOMIC development ,HUMAN capital ,LABOR supply ,ECONOMIC policy ,AGRICULTURAL economists ,AGRICULTURAL policy - Abstract
Prior to his Nobel Prize-winning work in economic development and human capital, T.W. Schultz focused his attention most centrally on the economics of U.S. agriculture. His research on this subject, published mostly between 1932 and 1951, laid the foundation for his later work. However, the lasting value of Schultz's earlier work may appear to have been called into question even by the author himself. In the three books of collected writings he published toward the end of his life (Schultz, 1990, 1993a, 1993b), very few early writings are reprinted or even cited. Nonetheless, among agricultural economists, Schultz's earlier work has been as influential as his later work became among economists generally. In the American Economic Association's (1969) compilation, Schultz was referenced in the index more than any other economist, and all twenty-two references to his works refer to studies of U.S. agriculture (and only two of them to his work on human capital). In this paper, I review Schultz's contributions under two headings: the economics of farming and agricultural policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
63. Heavy Constraints on a “Weightless World”?
- Author
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Perraton, Jonathan
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,NATURAL resources ,RESOURCE allocation ,INDUSTRIES ,COMMUNICATION & technology ,NINETEEN nineties ,ECONOMIC indicators - Abstract
Late 1990s claims of a shift toward a new economy in the United States and other developed economies were said to accelerate earlier trends reducing the material content of production. The shift toward a postindustrial services economy is said to have been accentuated by application of new information and communications technologies, dramatically reducing the material content of production. This offers the possibility for continuous economic expansion unconstrained by resources supply. This paper provides a critical analysis of these trends in relation to resource use by developed economies. It shows that trends toward a lower material content of production are occurring, and this has led to poor demand conditions for primary producers. Nevertheless, these trends fall well short of eliminating Western economies’ dependence on key resources. This paper shows the changing role of resources in economic activity among developed economies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
64. PERSPECTIVE ON PRODUCTIVITY RESEARCH.
- Author
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Fabricant, Solomon
- Subjects
ESTIMATION theory ,GROWTH rate ,INDUSTRIAL productivity ,UNITED States economy ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC forecasting - Abstract
Radical changes, up and down, have taken place in the estimates of growth in total factor productivity in the U.S. made by different economists, or by the same economists at different times. If such estimates provide ‘some sort of measure of our ignorance,’ as Abramovitz once put it, we seemed to be a lot less ignorant in 1927 (when Cobb and Douglas published their famous paper), or in 1967 (when Jorgenson and Griliches published theirs), than we were in the years between (when Schmookler, Abramovitz, Kendrick, and Denison completed their studies), or than we are today (when we have, or will soon have, revised estimates by Denison and by Kendrick, and new estimates by Christensen and Jorgenson). Viewed in this perspective, many questions may be raised about the significance of the current estimates that something like a third or more of the rate of increase in U.S. national output is ‘due’ to increase in productivity, as well as about the concepts, data, and methods that underlie the estimates. A list of particular subjects worth considering for research is given and each is briefly discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1974
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
65. Comment on B.T. McCallum, 'New Classical Macroeconomics: A Sympathetic Account'
- Author
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Blanchard, Olivier Jean
- Subjects
MACROECONOMICS ,ECONOMISTS ,IMPERFECT competition ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Discusses the convergence between the economists living in the Midwest and those living in the East and West Coasts of the U.S. who have separate approaches in macroeconomics in view of the paper of economist Bennett McCallum focusing on the new classical macroeconomics as of June 1989. Approach of the Midwest economists on the role of imperfect competition in price setting; Views of the East and West Coasts economists on economic growth; Impact of the convergence on several issues about macroeconomics.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
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66. Different Immigrants, Same Attitudes? Making Sense of the Association Between Two Immigrant Groups.
- Author
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Tsai, Tsung‐han, Tsai, Chia‐hung, and Huang, Chi
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,ECONOMIC development ,BLUE collar workers ,SOCIAL attitudes ,ECONOMIC impact ,FOREIGN workers - Abstract
Objective: Previous studies of public attitudes toward immigration have been set in economically developed areas such as the United States and the countries of Western Europe, implicitly applying the term "immigrants" solely to blue‐collar laborers. In this article, we extend the discussion to Taiwan, a newly democratic and nearly developed country in East Asia. Methods: Our study investigates public attitudes toward immigrants with different occupations and test predictions derived from both economic and cultural approaches. Results: From an analysis of the survey data, we find different economic factors for pro‐immigration attitudes toward foreign professionals and laborers. Conclusions: Specifically, people who have higher incomes are more likely to allow foreign professionals to become citizens, and people with positive assessments of national and individual economic conditions are more likely to favor the inflow of foreign workers. Furthermore, cultural tolerance and a high level of education are correlated to pro‐migration attitudes toward both foreign professionals and laborers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
67. Financing Innovation and Growth: Cash Flow, External Equity, and the 1990s R&D Boom.
- Author
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BROWN, JAMES R., FAZZARI, STEVEN M., and PETERSEN, BRUCE C.
- Subjects
CORPORATE finance ,RESEARCH & development ,CASH flow ,ECONOMIC development ,PUBLIC companies - Abstract
The financing of R&D provides a potentially important channel to link finance and economic growth, but there is no direct evidence that financial effects are large enough to impact aggregate R&D. U.S. firms finance R&D from volatile sources: cash flow and stock issues. We estimate dynamic R&D models for high-tech firms and find significant effects of cash flow and external equity for young, but not mature, firms. The financial coefficients for young firms are large enough that finance supply shifts can explain most of the dramatic 1990s R&D boom, which implies a significant connection between finance, innovation, and growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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68. Broadband and knowledge intensive firm clusters: Essential link or auxiliary connection?
- Author
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Mack, Elizabeth A.
- Subjects
BROADBAND communication systems ,ECONOMIC development ,INTERNET service providers ,TELECOMMUNICATION ,ELECTRONIC commerce ,COMPETITIVE advantage in business - Abstract
Copyright of Papers in Regional Science is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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69. Using power sector reform as an opportunity to increase the uptake of renewable energy in the power sector: Responding to peak oil and climate change in Caribbean and Pacific small island developing States, between 1970-2010.
- Author
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Niles, Keron and Lloyd, Bob
- Subjects
RENEWABLE energy sources ,POWER resources & economics ,ECONOMIC development ,CLIMATE change ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Small island developing States ( SIDS) have narrow resource bases and are usually extremely reliant on fossil fuel based energy for transport and electricity generation. These island economies are thus particularly vulnerable to the impacts of peak oil and also to climate change, impacts which are likely to not only hamper economic development but also adversely affect the quality of life of local inhabitants. In order to reduce the vulnerability of SIDS to peak oil, an urgent transition to renewable sources of energy is necessary. This paper propounds that the reform of power sector that took place in Caribbean and Pacific SIDS (particularly between 1970 and 2000) should have been viewed as an opportunity to re-orient power producers away from the proclivity to utilise conventional fossil fuel uses. Reasons why reform measures did not result in a substantive transition are put forward. Moreover, recommendations towards facilitating a transition to renewable energy in the power sector through future reforms are proposed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
70. Energy Abundance or Environmental Worries? Analyzing Public Support for Fracking in the United States.
- Author
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Davis, Charles and Fisk, Jonathan M.
- Subjects
HYDRAULIC fracturing -- Social aspects ,HYDRAULIC engineering ,HYDRAULIC fracturing ,OIL wells ,EMERGENCY management ,ECONOMIC development ,PUBLIC opinion - Abstract
This paper provides an analysis of public attitudes toward fracking use and policies with an eye toward factors that help us account for differing levels of support. Using data from a national survey of American adults, we found that women and people residing in urban areas are slightly more inclined to oppose fracking and to favor more regulation in terms of drilling operations and company chemical disclosure requirements than men or people living in rural areas. Our key findings, however, are that opposition to fracking and support for current or increased levels of regulation are strongly related to Democratic Party identification and to pro-environmental policy attitudes. We conclude by suggesting that a tendency for people to view fracking as an environmental rather than an energy issue has potentially important implications for the implementation of locally based regulatory requirements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
71. Culture as an Engine of Local Development Processes: System-Wide Cultural Districts II: Prototype Cases.
- Author
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Sacco, Pier Luigi, Ferilli, Guido, Blessi, Giorgio Tavano, and Nuccio, Massimiliano
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,CULTURAL districts ,PROTOTYPES ,ECONOMIC models - Abstract
Building upon the companion paper in this issue, this essay analyses five case studies that can be taken as prototypes of the system-wide cultural district culture-led developmental model. The research targets five cities in Europe and the U.S.: Valencia, Austin, Newcastle/ Gateshead, Linz, and Denver. Each presents specific characteristics but also some deep, structural common traits. The case studies are compared and their future viability is evaluated in terms of the factors presented in the companion piece. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
72. SPREAD AND BACKWASH EFFECTS FOR NONMETROPOLITAN COMMUNITIES IN THE U.S.
- Author
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Ganning, Joanna P., Baylis, Kathy, and Lee, Bumsoo
- Subjects
EMPIRICAL research ,ECONOMIC development ,METROPOLITAN areas ,EXTERNALITIES - Abstract
Few studies empirically estimate the effects of metropolitan growth on nonmetropolitan communities at a national scale. This paper estimates the growth effects of 276 MSAs on population in 1,988 nonmetropolitan communities in the United States from 2000 to 2007. We estimate the distance for growth spillovers from MSAs to nonmetropolitan communities and test the assumption that a single MSA influences growth. We compare three methods of weighting cities' influence: nearest city only, inverse-distance, and relative commuting flow to multiple cities. We find the inverse-distance approach provides slightly more reliable and theoretically supportable results than the traditional nearest city approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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73. NONLINEAR GROWTH EFFECTS OF TAXATION: A SEMI-PARAMETRIC APPROACH USING AVERAGE MARGINAL TAX RATES.
- Author
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Arin, K. Peren, Berlemann, Michael, Koray, Faik, and Kuhlenkasper, Torben
- Subjects
TAXATION -- Social aspects ,TAX research ,ECONOMIC development ,GROSS domestic product - Abstract
SUMMARY One of the major challenges of empirical tax research is the identification and calculation of appropriate tax data. While there is consensus that average marginal tax rates are most suitable for studying the effects of tax policy on economic growth, because of data limitations the calculation of marginal tax rates has been limited to the USA and the UK. This paper provides calculations of average marginal tax rates for the four Scandinavian countries using the methodologies of Seater (1982, 1985) and Barro and Sahasakul (1983, 1986). Then, by pooling the newly calculated tax rates for the Scandinavian countries with the data for the USA and the UK, we investigate the effects of tax policy shocks on the per capita GDP growth rate. Our results suggest that an increase in average marginal tax rates has a negative impact on economic growth. Employing additive mixed panel models with penalized splines as estimation approach, we show that changes in tax rates have nonlinear effects. Increasing average marginal tax rates turn out to be the most distorting at relatively moderate tax rates. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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74. DECLINE IN US OUTPUT GROWTH VOLATILITY: A WAVELET ANALYSIS* DECLINE IN US OUTPUT GROWTH VOLATILITY: A WAVELET ANALYSIS.
- Author
-
LO CASCIO, IOLANDA
- Subjects
MARKET volatility ,WAVELETS (Mathematics) ,PRODUCTION (Economic theory) ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC impact - Abstract
The aim of the paper is to determine (endogenously) whether the volatility of the US output growth rate has changed since the late 1940s. By applying the discrete wavelet transform to the annualized quarter-to-quarter output growth series, we test the homogeneity of the variance on a scale-by-scale basis. A version of the Normalized and Centered Cumulative Sum of Squares test, adapted to wavelets, leads us to reject the null of constant variance in the two levels of decomposition of the highest resolution and to locate a single break in 1982. The economic implications are explored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
75. Investigating Differences in How the News Media Views Homosexuality Across Nations: An Analysis of the United States, South Africa, and Uganda.
- Author
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Adamczyk, Amy, Kim, Chunrye, and Paradis, Lauren
- Subjects
HOMOSEXUALITY ,SAME-sex relationships ,CIVIL rights ,RELIGION & sociology - Abstract
While there is a wealth of information about the extent to which people across the world disapprove of homosexuality, we know a lot less about the lenses through which they view same-sex relations. The aim of this study is to understand better how homosexuality is framed in the public press, and how religion and economic development may combine to shape this discourse. Through an analysis of almost 400 newspaper articles, this study compares how homosexuality is framed in Uganda, South Africa, and the United States. Because these nations have high levels of religious belief, but differ in their level of economic development and democracy, we can assess how these factors interact to shape portrayals. Drawing on work from cultural sociology and the sociology of religion, this study shows that the United States is much more likely than Uganda to frame homosexuality as a civil rights issue and use entertainers as claimsmakers. Conversely, articles from Uganda are more likely than those from the United States or South Africa to frame homosexuality as a religious issue and draw on religious claimsmakers. Likewise, Uganda is much more likely than South Africa to discuss homosexuality in the context of Western influences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
76. The Market for Corporate Responsibility Reporting in the Americas.
- Author
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Hamilton, Trina and Tschopp, Daniel J.
- Subjects
SOCIAL responsibility of business ,CORPORATE culture ,STAKEHOLDERS ,ECONOMIC development ,QUANTITATIVE research - Abstract
The largest corporations in the world are increasingly adopting international corporate responsibility ( CR) reporting standards from organizations such as the Global Reporting Initiative to meet stakeholder expectations for reliable and comparable social and environmental performance data. At the same time, significant geographic variations in reporting rates remain. The goal of this paper is to explain the diffusion of international CR reporting standards within the Americas. Reporting rates cannot be explained fully by a country's population size or level of economic development. Based on a unique statistical analysis of the relative impact of institutional environments, corporate resources and strategic orientation, stakeholder pressures, and transnational trade and learning networks, this research concludes that the diffusion of CR reporting throughout the Americas to date has been fueled by a rather narrow set of corporations with the capacities necessary to implement CR reporting and the strategic orientation to benefit from it. Moreover, corporations' internal capacities and the external demands for CR reporting have been enhanced in select countries by national and transnational CR advocacy and training organizations. This has led to an uneven development of CR reporting thus far, and this unevenness is expected to continue even as overall reporting rates increase. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
77. Single Females in Rural Energy-Impacted Counties: The Effects of Rapid Growth and a Male Marriage-Market Squeeze.
- Author
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Hooper, Douglas A. and England, J. Lynn
- Subjects
RURAL women ,ECONOMIC development ,SINGLE women ,MARRIAGE ,ENERGY development - Abstract
There are two hypotheses concerning how rapid growth affects women in rural communities: (1) women are more adversely affected than men, and (2) growth liberates women from their traditional sex roles. We used a specific subgroup of the female population-single, never- married females of marriageable age-to examine these two hypotheses. This paper focuses on how a male marriage-market squeeze caused by the influx of a large number of single, never-married males of marriageable age affects these females. The hypotheses, combined with proposals drawn from the demographic literature on marriage markets, are tested using data from counties in Montana and Utah impacted by energy development in the mid- and late 1970s. The measures used are changes in nuptiality rates and age patterns of first marriages. Our results do not allow us to fully accept or reject either hypothesis. Rather, changes in age patterns of marriage indicate that sorting out the local effects from the more pervasive social effects is problematic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1988
78. Uneven Development and Racial Composition in the Deep South: 1970--1980.
- Author
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Coldough, Gleana
- Subjects
INDUSTRIALIZATION ,ECONOMIC development ,JOB vacancies ,EMPLOYMENT of Black people ,LABOR market - Abstract
This paper explores the process of uneven development in the Deep South, focusing on the decade of 1970-1980. Measures developed from Census and County Business Pasterns data are used to examine several industrialization processes in all the counties of Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Mississippi. These data reveal that changes in manufacturing establishments and employment are not uniform across the region, and low-wage industries continue to dominate the economy of the region. Further, the analysis documents the continuing significance of racial composition in these industrialization processes: plant and employment increases are more likely for predominantly white counties and losses more likely for counties having large black populations. Counties having high proportions of blacks and poor whites display the strongest attractions for low-wage industries. I also examine the effects of other labor-market characteristics upon the development process and suggest policy implications on the basis of these findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1988
79. The Rural Development Act of 1972: A Skeptical View.
- Author
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Nolan, Michael F. and Hefferman, William D.
- Subjects
RURAL development -- Law & legislation ,RURAL development ,RURAL industries ,COMMUNITY development ,ECONOMIC development ,RURAL sociology - Abstract
The decade of the seventies thus far has witnessed a considerable amount of legislative attention directed at rural areas. Under the general heading or rural development no fewer than 48 bills were introduced in the first session of the 92nd Congress in the House of Representatives and 22 bills were introduced in the U.S. Senate. Few of these became law but the sheer numbers give some indication as to the political importance of the issues involved. The purpose of this paper is to focus on a portion of one of the most important pieces of rural development legislation, the Rural Development Act of 1972 (RDA-72). This article traces the legislative history and the philosophical assumptions of RDA-72 with particular regard to the provisions of rural industrialization in the U.S.
- Published
- 1974
80. Investment in Education and U.S. Economic Growth.
- Author
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Jorgenson, Dale W. and Fraumeni, Barbara M.
- Subjects
INVESTMENTS ,EDUCATION ,ECONOMIC development ,UNITED States economy ,HUMAN capital - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to measure the impact of investment in education on U.S. economic growth. Education is treated as an investment in human capital, since benefits accrue to an educated individual over a lifetime of activities. One of the most important benefits is higher income from labor market participation. This is the key to understanding the link between investment in education and economic growth. Our most important finding is that investment in human and nonhuman capital accounts for an overwhelming proportion of the growth of the U.S. economy during the postwar period. Educational investment will continue to predominate in the investment requirements for more rapid growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
81. Taking Care of the Guests: The Impact of Immigrants on Services- An Industry Case Study.
- Author
-
Waldinger, Roger
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,HOSPITALITY industry ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The paper seeks to directly assess the relationship between immigration and the transformation of the urban service economy through a case study of immigrants in the hotel industry in New York City and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. This comparative study of the hotel industry provides a particular good test case for both the restructuring and the replacement labor perspectives. Hotels in major U.S. cities have witnessed a major burst of capital investment in recent years. The industry's growth has been linked to the new sources of urban agglomeration and the pattern of growth has followed the trajectory of market segmentation predicted by the restructuring hypothesis. As hotels have also been a traditional employer of African-Americans focusing on this industry highlights the processes by which jobs are allocated to immigrants or native blacks. By comparing New York, still the quintessential immigrant city, with Philadelphia, a city with few immigrants, the paper assess whether the service sector/immigration interactions are indeed as important as the restructuring hypothesis asserts.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
82. POPULATION GROWTH IN HIGH-AMENITY NONMETROPOLITAN AREAS: WHAT'S THE PROGNOSIS?
- Author
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Rickman, Dan S. and Rickman, Shane D.
- Subjects
POPULATION ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC activity ,QUALITY of life - Abstract
ABSTRACT This paper examines the continued strong population growth in U.S. nonmetropolitan areas possessing high levels of natural amenities during the 1990s and the reasons for near convergence of growth across the top tiers of the amenity hierarchy. Based on estimated parsimonious spatial hedonic growth regressions, strong demand for high-amenity areas continued in the 1990s, but the converging of population growth across the top tiers appeared related to capitalization of amenity differences among the tiers into factor prices. Yet, evidence obtained from controlling for spatial effects suggests that the relative quality of life in the top two tiers had deteriorated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
83. INCOME INEQUALITY, ECONOMIC GROWTH, AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF INCOME GAINS: EVIDENCE FROM THE U.S. STATES.
- Author
-
Hasanov, Fuad and Izraeli, Oded
- Subjects
INCOME inequality ,ECONOMIC development ,COST of living ,NONLINEAR theories ,ELASTICITY (Economics) ,EDUCATION & economics ,U.S. states - Abstract
ABSTRACT This paper first investigates a relationship between economic growth and income inequality using U.S. states data, a state cost-of-living deflator, and nonlinearity. It then explores the distribution of income gains among different income groups. We find that the impact of inequality on growth is nonlinear. Lowering inequality or increasing it substantially reduces growth; thus stable inequality may be good for growth. Economic growth affects incomes of the poor, the middle-income group, and the rich similarly with the elasticity of one. Education and labor market policies become important in promoting growth and improving income gains of the poor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
84. Regional Innovation Clusters: A Critical Review.
- Author
-
Junbo Yu and Jackson, Randall
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,INDUSTRIAL clusters ,JOB creation ,INDUSTRIAL policy - Abstract
In this paper, we present a critical assessment of recent economic development policy directions centered on the concept of regional innovation clusters. We begin by investigating the rationale underlying the Obama administration's promotion of regional innovation clusters (RICs) and their introduction to the policy arena in its Strategy for American Innovation. The connections among RICs and existing research and policies in industry and occupational clusters, regional innovation systems and regional economic development are identified and analyzed to highlight those most critical challenges to conceptualizing and theorizing RICs. While we applaud the long overdue focus of economic development policies on sub-national regions, we identify several major conceptual shortcomings and programmatic difficulties associated with RICs as a centerpiece for economic development strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
85. The duelling models: NEG vs amenity migration in explaining US engines of growth.
- Author
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Partridge, Mark D.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC geography ,ECONOMIC development ,REGIONAL economics ,AMENITY migration ,UNITED States economy - Abstract
The new economic geography (NEG) has become a mainstay of regional science in the last two decades, as signified by the awarding of Paul Krugman, the Nobel Prize. Yet, most American regional scientists and urban/regional economists do not use NEG in determining regional growth patterns. Instead, they rely on factors such as natural amenity migration, whose roots lie back to the work of Philip Graves in the mid 1970s. Conversely, two of the world's leading economic geographers – Allen Scott and Michael Storper – have strongly argued that job availability not household amenities have determined US regional dynamics. Given the disparity of views over the largest developed economy in the world, we hold a competition to determine which of these leading contenders accurately predict US interregional growth dynamics over the last 40–60 years. The runaway winner of the duel is natural amenity led growth with the crown going to Graves. Implications are drawn for both empirical research and EU economic integration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
86. Trade Structure, FTAs, and Economic Growth.
- Author
-
Chan-Hyun Sohn and Hongshik Lee
- Subjects
ECONOMIC indicators ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC forecasting - Abstract
What is the relationship between trade and economic growth? Does trade positively affect economic growth? Owing to the ambiguity of this relationship, the empirical relationship has remained open ( Rodriguez and Rodrik, 2001 ; Baldwin, 2003 ). This paper introduces “trade structure” variables, borrowed from the paper of Lederman and Maloney (2003 ), and applies them to the relationship. A dynamic panel estimation for the data of 66 countries during 1991–2004 is used to verify the validity and robustness of the relationship. Trade structure variables show strong evidence of positive effects on growth. Free-trade agreements/areas (FTAs) also enhance economic growth. East Asia shows a different relationship between trade and growth than the world and reflects a weaker role of FTAs in its growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
87. The Allocation of Talent and U.S. Economic Growth.
- Author
-
Hsieh, Chang‐Tai, Hurst, Erik, Jones, Charles I., and Klenow, Peter J.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ABILITY ,BLACK men ,WHITE men - Abstract
In 1960, 94 percent of doctors and lawyers were white men. By 2010, the fraction was just 62 percent. Similar changes in other highly‐skilled occupations have occurred throughout the U.S. economy during the last 50 years. Given that the innate talent for these professions is unlikely to have changed differently across groups, the change in the occupational distribution since 1960 suggests that a substantial pool of innately talented women and black men in 1960 were not pursuing their comparative advantage. We examine the effect on aggregate productivity of the convergence in the occupational distribution between 1960 and 2010 through the prism of a Roy model. Across our various specifications, between 20% and 40% of growth in aggregate market output per person can be explained by the improved allocation of talent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
88. Community Colleges: Drivers of Economic Development in Small Rural Communities.
- Author
-
Friedel, Janice Nahra and Reed, Jared W.
- Subjects
COMMUNITY colleges ,ECONOMIC development ,RURAL development ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CULTURAL activities - Abstract
This chapter discusses an innovative state public policy which has incentivized Iowa's community colleges to become the economic drivers of their region. Created in the 1983 legislation, it continues to this day to affect Iowa's rural communities and their colleges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
89. Measuring the natural rate of interest: A note on transitory shocks.
- Author
-
Lewis, Kurt F. and Vazquez‐Grande, Francisco
- Subjects
INTEREST rates ,ECONOMIC shock ,BAYESIAN analysis ,ECONOMIC development ,GREAT Recession, 2008-2013 - Abstract
Summary: We present evidence that the natural rate of interest is buffeted by both permanent and transitory shocks. We establish this result by estimating a benchmark model with Bayesian methods and loose priors on the unobserved drivers of the natural rate. When subject to transitory shocks, the median estimate for the US economy is more procyclical, displays a less marked secular decline, and is therefore higher following the Great Recession than most estimates in the literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
90. Institutional Collective Action and Economic Development Joint Ventures.
- Author
-
Feiock, Richard C., Steinacker, Annette, and Park, Hyung Jun
- Subjects
PUBLIC-private sector cooperation ,ECONOMIC development ,COLLECTIVE action ,JOINT ventures ,PUBLIC administration ,COOPERATION - Abstract
There is high interest in economic development efforts involving cooperation or collaboration among metropolitan jurisdictions. To determine why some local governments engage in cooperative agreements while others do not, this paper investigates transaction obstacles, including bargaining, information, agency, enforcement, and division problems. The authors then advance an institutional collective action explanation for intergovernmental cooperation, focusing on the conditions under which these transactions costs are low. This work anticipates that the costs associated with interlocal cooperation are influenced by the demographic characteristics of communities, local political institutions, and the nature of regional government networks. Empirical analysis based on a national survey of local development officials provides support for several predictions from this model and identifies policy variables that, in turn, increase the prospects for cooperation, specifically through the development of informal policy networks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
91. Economic development lessons from and for North American Indian economies.
- Author
-
Anderson, Terry L. and Parker, Dominic P.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,LITERATURE ,RESEARCH ,ECONOMICS ,NATURAL resources ,PROPERTY rights - Abstract
This paper reviews the literature on economic development as it relates to indigenous people in the United States and Canada, and focuses on how institutions affect economic development of reservation and reserve economies. Evidence shows that strong property rights to reservation and reserve land and natural resources, whether communal or individual, are and always have been important determinants of productivity. Political and legal institutions that are perceived as stable and predictable to tribal members and to non-Natives also improve economic opportunities for indigenous people living on reservations and reserves. Research reviewed here also shows that culture and acculturation are important in the development process. Although our emphasis is on North America, the findings are applicable to indigenous people in other parts of the world and shed light on growth questions that loom large for developing countries around the world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
92. The Neoliberalization of Development: Trade Capacity Building and Security at the US Agency for International Development.
- Author
-
Essex, Jamey
- Subjects
NEOLIBERALISM ,FREE trade ,ECONOMIC development ,NATIONAL security ,GOVERNMENT agencies ,TRADE regulation ,SOCIAL services - Abstract
This paper examines recent changes at the US Agency for International Development (USAID) regarding the connections between trade liberalization, development, and security. USAID has adopted “trade capacity building” as a framework for development, and, in conjunction with new US national security discourses, now operates under the assumption that underdevelopment is a source of state weakness that produces insecurity. I argue that these changes in how USAID understands and undertakes development constitute the neoliberalization of development. In accordance with these shifts, USAID has redefined critical aspects of its development mission, undergone internal restructuring, and altered its relationship with other US state institutions and capital. The actual prospects for achieving security or development are slim, however, as the agency remains wedded to definitions of both that suggest the only acceptable role for the state lies in facilitating further neoliberalization and promoting the stability of capitalist class relations. An overview of USAID's historical development, and a closer examination of the place of food aid and food security in the agency's development work, demonstrate this. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
93. Product line extensions: causes and effects.
- Author
-
Axarloglou, Kostas
- Subjects
MANUFACTURING industries ,PRODUCT lines ,PRODUCT management ,SUPPLY & demand ,ECONOMIC demand ,ECONOMIC development ,PROFIT margins ,PROFITABILITY - Abstract
In this paper, and using data from a sample of five US manufacturing industries, we study the implications of market demand growth on product line extensions and the effects of the latter on industry profit margins. Companies extend their product lines in response to expansions in market demand and this tends to depress profit margins in the industry. Finally, these results are quantitatively significant. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
94. Grandma was Right: Why Cohabitation Undermines Relational Satisfaction, But Is Increasing Anyway.
- Author
-
Wydick, Bruce
- Subjects
UNMARRIED couples ,MARRIED people ,MARITAL status ,MARRIAGE ,LABOR supply ,DEVELOPED countries ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
This paper uses a game theoretic model to explain empirical research which has revealed higher relational satisfaction among married couples than cohabiting couples, as well as among married couples who did not cohabit before marriage. Despite these findings, in recent decades cohabitation rates have dramatically increased in both Europe and the United States. Instrumental variables estimations on data from 28 industrialized countries and 50 U.S. states show cohabitation strongly correlated with increases in women's labor force participation, where a 10 percent increase in women's labor force participation results in a 6.4 to 14.6 percent increase in cohabitation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
95. THE COMMERCE CLAUSE AS A CONSTRAINT ON WASTEFUL BUSINESS INCENTIVES: ROADBLOCK OR BUMP IN THE ROAD IN THE ‘RACE TO THE BOTTOM?’.
- Author
-
Mccarthy, Linda
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,EMPLOYMENT ,CORPORATIONS ,LABOR incentives - Abstract
State and local economic development efforts have grown during the last three decades in the United States. Some public incentives for companies may be effective, including those for high unemployment areas; others may be wasteful, especially if they retain corporations that merely threaten to leave. As companies increasingly expect incentives, however, governments find themselves in a ‘race to the bottom’– the only way to remain competitive is to offer more. Having identified arguments for and against incentives, this paper considers the prospects for addressing wasteful competition, including, in the absence of Congressional action, the US Supreme Court's application of the Commerce Clause to strike down incentives that discriminate against interstate commerce. A review of a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of incentives for the DaimlerChrysler Toledo Jeep plant finds that the Commerce Clause is not a solution for wasteful competition. Another model to consider is the European Union's regulation of incentives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
96. “EDGE” OR “EDGELESS” CITIES? URBAN SPATIAL STRUCTURE IN U.S. METROPOLITAN AREAS, 1980 TO 2000*.
- Author
-
Bumsoo Lee
- Subjects
URBAN growth ,METROPOLITAN areas ,ECONOMIC development ,DECENTRALIZATION in government ,LEGAL pluralism - Abstract
This paper presents a descriptive analysis of spatial trends in six U.S. metropolitan areas. The results show that generalized job dispersion was a more common spatial process than subcentering during the 1980s and 1990s when jobs continued to decentralize from the metropolitan core to the suburbs. Three distinctive patterns of spatial development were found. Job dispersion was predominant in Portland and Philadelphia, whereas the polycentricity of Los Angeles and San Francisco was further reinforced. New York and Boston with large and long-established CBDs were less prone to decentralization. Each metro seems to have developed a unique pattern of decentralization in light of their histories and circumstances, which has limited the growth of commuting times. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
97. Total Factor Productivity and Monetary Policy: Evidence from Conditional Volatility.
- Author
-
Apergis, Nicholas and Miller, Stephen M.
- Subjects
MONETARY policy ,MARKET volatility ,ECONOMIC activity ,KEYNESIAN economics ,ECONOMIC development ,GROSS domestic product ,MACROECONOMICS ,MONEY supply - Abstract
This paper empirically assesses whether monetary policy and its volatility affect real economic activity through their effect on the aggregate supply side of the macroeconomy. Analysts typically argue that monetary policy either does not affect the real economy (the classical dichotomy) or only affects the real economy in the short run through aggregate demand (new Keynesian or new classical theories). Real business cycle theorists try to explain the business cycle with supply-side productivity shocks. We provide some preliminary evidence about how monetary policy and its volatility affect the aggregate supply side of the macroeconomy through their effect on total factor productivity and its volatility. Total factor productivity provides an important measure of supply-side performance. The results show that monetary policy and its volatility exert a positive and statistically significant effect on the supply side of the macroeconomy. Moreover, the findings buttress the importance of reducing short-run swings in monetary policy variables as well as support the adoption of an optimal money supply rule. Our results also prove consistent with the effective role of monetary policy during the so-called ‘Great Moderation’ in US gross domestic product volatility beginning in the early 1980s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
98. Making the least of our differences? Trends in local economic development in Ontario and Michigan, 1990-2005.
- Author
-
Reese, Laura A. and Sands, Gary
- Subjects
PUBLIC administration ,STRATEGIC planning ,ECONOMIC policy ,DEVELOPMENT economics ,URBAN planning ,ECONOMIC development ,LAND economics ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,SPECIAL events - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Public Administration is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
99. Guns vs. Taxes? A Look at How Defense Spending Affects U.S. Federal Tax Policy.
- Author
-
CARROLL, DEBORAH A.
- Subjects
MILITARY budgets ,NATIONAL security ,TAXATION ,INCOME tax ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,MILITARY readiness ,FISCAL policy ,DEFENSE industries ,ECONOMIC development ,FINANCE - Abstract
Although studies have shown a theoretical and empirical link between defense spending and economic growth and between economic growth and tax policy, the impact of defense spending on federal tax policy remains largely unexplored. This paper proposes a theoretical model and empirical test to explore the direct and indirect effects of defense spending on federal tax policy. The findings suggest that consumption expenditures for national defense directly influence the federal corporate income tax rate. However, the analysis finds no indirect relationship between defense spending and federal tax policy mediated through economic growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
100. On the Incidence of US Tariffs.
- Author
-
Clark, Don P. and Bruce, Donald
- Subjects
TARIFF ,EXPORT subsidies ,INDIRECT taxation ,FOREIGN trade regulation ,ECONOMIC development ,EXPORT marketing ,DEVELOPING countries ,DEVELOPED countries ,INTERNATIONAL economic relations - Abstract
This paper provides evidence on the incidence of tariffs on products of export interest to developing countries by investigating the relationship between per capita incomes of US trading partners and tariff rates. It constitutes the first attempt to assess the incidence of tariffs imposed by the US on countries that span the entire range of per capita incomes. Average tariff rates are lower for the poorest and richest countries and higher for countries in the middle of the income distribution. This finding is not consistent with the widely held view that tariffs used by industrial nations bear more heavily on products of export interest to poorer developing countries than on imports from industrial nations. It is consistent with the tariff escalation pattern reported in earlier studies if advanced countries account for most products at the high end of the fabrication scale. Results show that poorest countries will find it difficult to escape tariffs by attaining higher levels of economic development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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