763 results
Search Results
2. TOPICS AND GEOGRAPHICAL DIFFUSION OF KNOWLEDGE IN TOP ECONOMIC JOURNALS.
- Author
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Fontana, Magda, Montobbio, Fabio, and Racca, Paolo
- Subjects
DEPRECIATION ,ECONOMICS ,MICROECONOMICS ,URBAN economics ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
We study the evolution of topics in economics and their geographical specialization by analyzing 13,233 papers from seven top journals between 1985 and 2012 and their forward citations. The share of U.S. publications declines from 75% to 64% with a corresponding increase of the European share from 12% to 24%. We use topic modeling and document the evolution of the discipline over 27 years. We estimate, with a quasi‐structural model, the citation lag distribution for 18 different topics and three large geographical areas. The modal citation lag is about 6.7 years in the entire sample and 4.8 years for citations from the top 100 journals. We quantify (1) the home bias effect in citations, (2) how it fades away over time, (3) the long lasting impact of U.S. publications vis‐à‐vis other geographical areas, and (4) the higher speed of diffusion and faster obsolescence in the United States. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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3. Industrial ecology and regionalization of economic governance: an opportunity to ‘localize’ sustainability?<FN>‘Local’ and ‘regional’ are used in this paper to refer to municipalities consisting of various types of urban centre such as cities, towns and rural areas, and governed by a single municipal government. </FN>
- Author
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Parto, Saeed
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL ecology ,MATERIALS management ,ECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
A shift of focus is discernible in the literature on industrial agglomeration and regional economic development in the post-Fordist/globalization context. In addition to economic factors, the new focus emphasizes the importance of social and cultural factors for the growth of new industrial agglomerations. However, despite the importance attached to the (natural) environment in writings on organizations, regions and economies over the last few years, the literature on industrial agglomeration continues to remain devoid of any substantial references to the environment. Attaining sustainability at the local/regional (see note) level requires, among other factors, collective effort by industrial organizations toward common goals including resource conservation, production efficiency, economic viability and social responsibility. This paper explores the possibilities for bridging the current gaps between regional planning policy and the requirements of ecosystem integrity and sustainable industrial development in the practical contexts provided by ‘eco-industrial parks’ (EIPs) and the Waterloo Industrial Network for Sustainability (WINS). Copyright © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. and ERP Environment [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
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4. What is the fracking story in Canada?
- Author
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Olive, Andrea
- Subjects
HYDRAULIC fracturing ,INDUSTRIAL pollution ,PUBLIC health ,WATER pollution prevention ,ECONOMIC development ,FRAMES (Social sciences) ,ENERGY policy ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper examines news media coverage of hydraulic fracturing in Canada over a five-year period in five newspapers. Hydraulic fracturing, or 'fracking,' has reenergized the North American oil and gas market. This technology has increased economic growth, but it also comes with unknown and uncertain environmental and public health risks. Regulation of the fracking industry varies globally. In Canada there are three provinces that engage in large volume fracking and four provinces that have placed a moratorium on fracking. This paper demonstrates that the Canadian fracking story is about five frames: water pollution, economic benefits, uncertain risks, moratoriums, and energy independence. There is a difference between coverage in the two national newspapers as well as a difference in national and provincial coverage. In Nova Scotia, where fracking is banned, the media focuses primarily on environmental issues and benefits to the local economy. In Saskatchewan, where fracking for oil is an essential part of the economy, the media focuses on economic benefits and downplays other frames. Overall, across the five papers, the media coverage is highly selective and focuses on particular stories about the economy or the environment, but not both. Quelle est la chronique de la fracturation hydraulique au Canada? Cet article fait état de la couverture médiatique liée à la fracturation hydraulique au Canada par cinq journaux sur une période de cinq ans. La fracturation hydraulique a revitalisé le marché nord-américain des hydrocarbures. Cette technologie favorise la croissance économique, mais comporte également des risques écologiques et sanitaires inconnus et incertains. La réglementation régissant l'industrie de la fracturation varie selon les pays. À l'échelle canadienne, trois provinces ont réalisé d'importantes opérations de fracturation et quatre provinces ont imposé un moratoire à la fracturation hydraulique. Cet article montre que le cadrage médiatique de la fracturation hydraulique repose sur cinq thématiques : la pollution hydrique, les retombées économiques, l'incertitude liée aux risques, les moratoires et la souveraineté énergétique. Le cadrage médiatique varie entre les deux journaux nationaux ainsi qu'entre les médias nationaux et provinciaux. En Nouvelle-Écosse, où la fracturation est interdite, les médias mettent l'accent sur les questions environnementales et les retombées pour l'économie locale. En Saskatchewan, où la fracturation pour extraire du pétrole joue un rôle économique primordial, les médias se concentrent sur les retombées économiques et minorent l'importance des autres thématiques. Dans l'ensemble, les cinq journaux appliquent un filtre sélectif dans le traitement du sujet et publient des reportages spécifiques portant sur l'économie ou sur l'environnement, mais pas les deux. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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5. Sustainability and identity – call for papers to a special issue in Sustainable Development.
- Author
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Dobers, Peter and Strannegård, Lars
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE development ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,ECONOMIC demand ,ECONOMICS ,CONSUMERS ,AESTHETICS ,ECONOMIC development ,ENVIRONMENTAL engineering ,CONSERVATION of natural resources - Abstract
The article presents a request for the submission of reports on sustainable development and identity. The increasing rate of consumption negatively affected the ecological system. Sustainability needs to be contextualized in terms of identities. Identities are influenced by social reality. The papers should examine the aesthetic, emotional. communicative and social aspects of consumption and organizing in different social and cultural contexts. The papers could either be based on empirical findings or be conceptual.
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- 2008
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6. Call for Papers for a Special Issue on.
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ECONOMICS ,COOPERATIVE societies ,PERIODICALS ,SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIAL sciences ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The editors of the journal "Annals of Public and Cooperative Economics" call for papers for a special issue on the topic 'Innovations in the public, co-operative and social economy.' The texts should integrate a theoretical argumentation and empirical data in a qualitative or quantitative analysis perspective. They must make a significant original contribution on the subject of social innovation. Texts may be in English or French, with a maximum of 20 pages.
- Published
- 2004
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7. The Impact of Uncertainty on the Feasibility of Humphrey-Hawkins Objectives.
- Author
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TINSLEY, P., BERRY, J., FRIES, G., GARRETT, B., NORMAN, A., SWAMY, P. A. V. B., and ZUR MUEHLEN, P. VON
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MONETARY policy ,MACROECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC policy ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
A stochastic framework for coordination of macroeconomic policies is introduced in this paper. It is suggested that: (i) measures of policy accountability should allow for the climate of uncertainty that surrounds policy decisions, and (ii) most models of aggregate economic activity impose arbitrary specifications of uncertainty that do not appear to be empirically justifiable. Ambiguities in interpreting the Humphrey-Hawkins reports of policy authorities are sketched in section II; a proposal for maximizing the ex ante prospects of policy objectives is illustrated in section III; finally, nonstationary allocations of uncertainty are discussed in sections IV and V. This paper provides a brief survey of ongoing work by members of the Federal Reserve Board staff on the role of uncertainty in policy forecasts. It suggests that policy discussion could be improved by more explicit consideration of the allocation of uncertainty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1981
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8. DISCUSSION.
- Author
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DENISON, EDWARD F.
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LABOR productivity ,CAPITAL productivity ,INCOME ,ECONOMICS ,BUSINESS cycles ,CAPITAL stock ,LABOR supply ,ENERGY conservation ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The article comments on a paper published within the issue, "Capital Formation and the Recent Productivity Slowdown," by Peter Clark. The author also discusses results from his own research in "Accounting for United States Economic Growth, 1929-1969," and applies it to Clark's paper. It is suggested that an abrupt rise in energy prices may have affected growth rates during the mid-1970s. The author also looks at a similar analysis made by John Kendrick, who focuses on the U.S. postwar period of 1948-1966.
- Published
- 1978
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9. CAUSES AND EFFECTS OF CORRUPTION: WHAT HAS PAST DECADE'S EMPIRICAL RESEARCH TAUGHT US? A SURVEY.
- Author
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Dimant, Eugen and Tosato, Guglielmo
- Subjects
CORRUPTION ,ECONOMIC development ,CRIMINAL law ,SOCIAL impact ,DATA quality ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Abstract: Corruption has fierce impacts on economic and societal development and is subject to a vast range of institutional, jurisdictional, societal, and economic conditions. It is this paper's aim to provide a reassessment and a comprehensive state
‐ of‐ the‐ art survey of existing literature on corruption and its causes and effects. A particularly strong focus is put on presenting and discussing insights resulting from empirical research and contrasting recent with older findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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10. THE LEWIS MODEL AFTER 50 YEARS.
- Author
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KIRKPATRICK, COLIN and BARRIENTOS, ARMANDO
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ECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC development ,LAND economics ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,DEVELOPED countries ,ECONOMIC expansion ,INDUSTRIAL development bonds ,DUAL economy - Abstract
We reassess the contribution of Sir Arthurpaper entitled‘Economic Development with Unlimited Supplies of Labour’ to our understanding of economic development, and to the establishment of development economics as an academic discipline. We argue that Lewis's key insight into the structural dualism characterizing developing countries mapped out a new and distinctive field for development economics and policy. The paper has had a profound impact over the last 50 years and continues to yield valuable lessons for understanding the nature of economic transformation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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11. Growth, Poverty and Development Assistance: When Does Foreign Aid Work?
- Author
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Sumner, Andy and Glennie, Jonathan
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,POVERTY ,POLITICAL stability ,MACROECONOMICS ,INTERNATIONAL economic assistance ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This is a survey paper on aid effectiveness in terms of the contribution of development assistance to economic growth and poverty reduction. The article focuses primarily on the most recent generation of cross-country studies. It concludes that there is a set of broad areas where the evidence reviewed shows signs of convergence that have direct relevance for policy decisions on aid and for aid-effectiveness discussions. These areas are: aid levels (meaning if the level of aid is too low or too high); domestic political institutions (including political stability and the extent of decentralisation); the composition of aid (including sectors, modalities, objectives and time horizons); and the volatility and fragmentation of aid. We also identify two areas where there is little sign of convergence in the evidence: the importance or otherwise of 'good', meaning orthodox macroeconomic policies and whether grants are more effective than loans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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12. Disaster-time Economy and an Economy of Morals: A Different Economic Order from the Market Economy under Globalization*.
- Author
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NITAGAI, KAMON
- Subjects
SENDAI Earthquake, Japan, 2011 ,CAPITALISM ,GLOBALIZATION ,PUBLIC finance ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC conditions in Japan, 1989- ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
With the experience of two severe disasters (the Hanshin Awaji Earthquake disaster of 1995 and the Great East Japan Earthquake disaster of 2011), I wish to consider 'subsistence' as human life, existence equaling the basic activities of life, an essential mutual act-like existence economy. In this paper, I pursue a positive development of 'disaster-time economics' as a research object under the larger framework of the formation of a 'moral economy,' as part of a critical process. In this paper, in order that a stricken area and society may aim at the realization of a new methodology about 'creative revival' for newly developing independent research involving the state of the revival fund of a wide sense is carried out. Nevertheless, there is an overall understanding of who, in what areas, and using what methodology, has conducted research in the restoration and revival process, as well as the weak points that tend to hinder the process. There is no research on the rationality and function of public finance expenditures or national sources expenditures. Therefore, in this paper, the term 'disaster-time economy' is newly prepared. From this concept, many activities of the project, service, support, self-efforts etc. of a social and private domain are grasped from a public sphere in connection with the process of maintenance/restoration under the disaster. The feature and subject point of the process are clarified. The market economy order that is going to be produced in this process does the basic work and determines the economic order for another self-subsistence over life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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13. Aid, Policies, and Growth in Developing Countries: A New Look at the Empirics.
- Author
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Alvi, Eskander, Mukherjee, Debasri, and Shukralla, Elias Kedir
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL economic assistance ,ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMIC policy ,ECONOMIC indicators ,ECONOMICS ,ECONOMIES of scale ,EMERGING markets ,INTERNATIONAL economic relations - Abstract
The relationship between foreign aid and economic growth has been the subject of much controversy. A recent theme suggesting that aid promotes growth, but only in a good policy environment has ratchet up that debate. In this paper, we assess the importance of policy and aid in generating growth when the aid, policy, and growth relationship is nonlinear. This allows us to examine the varying effects of aid and policy in different data segments, which we do without imposing any particular structure on the underlying relationship. We find that policy is an important determinant of growth. We also find partial corroboration of the view that aid is growth enhancing in a good policy environment, and some evidence of diminishing returns to aid. These findings suggest that nonlinearities if not appropriately addressed fail to capture the detailed underlying dynamics and thereby mask some key features of the aid-policy-growth relationship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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14. Controversies over the impact of development aid: it works; it doesn't; it can, but that depends ...
- Author
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McGillivray, Mark, Feeny, Simon, Hermes, Niels, and Lensink, Robert
- Subjects
MACROECONOMICS ,SURVEYS ,EMPIRICAL research ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper surveys five decades of empirical research on the macroeconomic impact of aid, looking mainly at studies examining the link between aid and growth. It argues that studies dating until the late 1990s produced either contradictory or inconclusive results. Aid either worked, or it didn't, according to this research. The paper then highlights a major shift in the literature that coincided with the release of the World Bank's Assessing Aid: What Works, What Doesn't and Why. Practically, all research published since that report agrees with its general finding that aid works to the extent that in its absence, growth would be lower. One controversy may therefore have been settled. Yet, as shown in this paper, the report has set-off an intense debate over the context in which aid works. That debate centres on whether the effectiveness of these inflows depends on the policy regime of recipient countries. Some possible avenues through which the heat might be taken out of this debate are considered. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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15. Estimating the Macroeconomic Effects of Monetary Unions: The Case of Trade and Output.
- Author
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Anyanwu, John C.
- Subjects
MONETARY unions ,INTERNATIONAL economic integration ,ECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC conditions in Africa - Abstract
Copyright of African Development Review / Revue Africaine de Développement 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
- 2003
- Full Text
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16. Approaching the Relational Nature of the Port‐City Interface in Europe: Ties and Tensions Between Seaports and the Urban.
- Author
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Hesse, Markus
- Subjects
HARBORS ,URBAN planning ,URBAN growth ,ECONOMIC development ,COMMUNITY development ,SOCIAL capital ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Abstract: This paper explores the broader setting of urban and economic development that links ports and cities in Europe and aims at enhancing our understanding of the port‐city interface. A relational view is taken for linking local developments and policies with overarching, more remote spheres of influence and impact, which can be considered both beneficial and critical for the port and the city. In order to illustrate the argument, a framework of three issues is applied to discuss the port‐city interface: first, the role of ports as economic engines of their wider region; second, the cruise ship industry as a market segment that re‐connects port and city; third, semi‐political bodies and institutions that play key roles as intermediaries and knowledge brokers. The paper finally discusses the implications of relationality for governing the port‐city interface. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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17. Finance, Investment and Growth: Evidence for Italy.
- Author
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Capolupo, Rosa
- Subjects
FINANCE ,ECONOMIC development ,ENDOGENEITY (Econometrics) ,INVESTMENTS ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper investigates the finance-growth nexus in Italy over a period of more than forty years (1965-2009). After a review of the theoretical and empirical literature, the paper provides evidence that the aggregate indicators of financial depth, constructed by Beck et al. () and widely used in the literature, played no significant role in spurring economic growth, after controlling for the main determinants of growth and corrected for endogeneity biases. The indicator of private credit to GDP-considered the most important measure of financial development-adversely affected growth in the period studied. By contrast, financial development indicators have a positive impact when are associated directly with the real investment rate. The results are robust to the inclusion of various controls and changes in the conditioning set. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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18. Key and Smart Actions to Alleviate Hunger and Poverty Through Irrigation and Drainage.
- Author
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Unver, Olcay, Wahaj, Robina, Lorenzon, Elisa, Mohammadi, Kourosh, Osias, Jerome R., Reinders, Felix, Wani, Suhas, Chuchra, Jyotsana, Lee, Peter, and Sangjun, I. M.
- Subjects
IRRIGATION ,POVERTY reduction ,HUNGER prevention ,AGRICULTURAL economics ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Copyright of Irrigation & Drainage 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
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The End of the Nuclear Era: Nuclear Decommissioning and Its Economic Impacts on U.S. Counties.
- Author
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Haller, Melissa, Haines, Michael, and Yamamoto, Daisaku
- Subjects
NUCLEAR reactor decommissioning ,NUCLEAR industry ,ELECTRIC power production ,EMPLOYMENT ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Between 1957 and 1990, nearly 100 nuclear reactors were constructed throughout the U.S., and nuclear power currently accounts for 20 percent of electricity production nationwide. Nuclear plants are often constructed in small communities for which they constitute a large source of employment and income. To date, 24 nuclear reactors have undergone decommissioning, and more are expected in the future, particularly as nuclear reactors age and face increasingly strict regulations. This paper examines the effects of nuclear decommissioning over time at the county-level on measures of employment, income, and population using difference-in-differences regression and propensity score matching. Panel data are obtained from the U.S. Census Bureau, and cover the years 1975-2014. The analysis finds that nuclear decommissioning is associated with positive and statistically significant increases in employment and per capita income over time. Results suggest that nuclear decommissioning may actually be a positive force in regional economic development, and concludes with limitations of the approach and implications for future research. As an emerging area of research, this paper is meant to build on previous work, as well as to provide a basis for further discussion and debate on the economic future of nuclear host communities and regional economies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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20. Background.
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,HIGHER education ,AGRICULTURAL industries ,NUCLEAR energy ,FEDERAL government ,POLITICAL science ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The article presents a list of books and papers about economics. The books and papers include "The Oxford Economic Atlas of the World"; "International Affairs," edited by Alfred De Grazia, "A Bibliography of Higher Education in Canada," by Robin S. Harris, "Latin America," published in "The International Advertiser," "Agriculture and Growth," published in "Latin American Business Highlights," "The Problems of Federalism," published in "Executive," and "How Will Nuclear Energy Grow," published in "Common Market."
- Published
- 1966
21. Characterisation of Economic Growth in Developing Economies with Informal Sector.
- Author
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Chattopadhyay, Subhasankar and Mondal, Rima
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPING countries ,INFORMAL sector ,CAPITAL intensive industries ,MARKET equilibrium ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
The paper presents a general equilibrium model of a developing economy with a capital intensive formal sector and a large informal sector with sector-specific capital to analyse the effects of investments on the sectoral returns to capital, sectoral wage rates, and composition of output and employment. Beginning with capital market disequilibrium (unequal sectoral rates of return) and labour market distortion (formal-informal wage gap), the model traces the evolution of the economy till capital market equilibrium is attained. The investments in the formal sector equalise the wages (a 'turning point' in growth à la Lewis) and reduces the size of the informal sector. The sectoral rates of returns equalise only if there is no factor intensity reversal, otherwise the economy specialises in the production of formal goods. The investments in the informal sector equalise the rates of return, do not affect the size of the formal sector and finally, a formal-informal wage gap persists provided factor intensities are not reversed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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22. Ethical infrastructure: A new requirement of the state's industrial policy.
- Author
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Chong Ju Choi and Digol, Diana
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL policy ,BUSINESS ethics ,LEADERSHIP ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Ethics of business leadership has witnessed a renewed interest in recent years provoked perhaps by a number of cases of business leadership failure. Unlike the critics of the industrial policy and direct market intervention by the state, in this paper we argue for an increased role of the state in imposing the ethical standards and the need to integrate the ethical infrastructure into the state's industrial policy. We believe that overall national economic success is dependent on four essential elements: financial infrastructure, physical infrastructure, knowledge infrastructure and ethical infrastructure. We further believe that proper integration and correct functioning of these elements within the state's industrial policy is fundamental to economic development and growth in any country in 21st century. We consider that the ethical infrastructure might provide an important element of a possible riposte in the future to the serious financial scandals of the kind that recently affected global business. We foresee that ethical infrastructure fosters best practice. In this paper, we argue that the integration of the ethical infrastructure is a new requirement of the state's industrial policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Public perceptions of Bhutan's approach to sustainable development in practice.
- Author
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Rinzin, Chhewang, Vermeulen, Walter J. V., and Glasbergen, Pieter
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE development ,ECONOMIC development & the environment ,INDUSTRIAL policy ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC geography ,ECONOMIC policy ,INDUSTRIAL organization (Economic theory) ,COMMERCIAL policy - Abstract
This paper focuses on the practical approach to sustainable development in Bhutan and specifically on public views on and experiences with the implementation of this strategy. Bhutan's development goal is ‘gross national happiness’. The strategy it has adopted to achieve this goal is known as the ‘middle path strategy’, which essentially addresses four sources (‘pillars’) of gross national happiness: economic development, ecological preservation, cultural preservation and good governance, without giving greater emphasis to any one pillar over the others. The paper is based on a survey conducted in 10 districts of Bhutan. Standard pre-designed questionnaires were used for interviews with representatives of three main groups in society: the state, civil society and the market. The results of this survey, the first of its kind to be carried out in the country, revealed that there is general agreement with the substance of the development strategy, although not everyone is fully aware of its scope and implications. A remarkable outcome of the survey, and one that contrasts with happiness studies conducted elsewhere in the world, was the high score for happiness in a country whose gross domestic product is so small. However, people do feel uncertain and the chosen development path is still fragile. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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24. INFRAMARGINAL ECONOMICS: AN OUTSIDER'S VIEW.
- Author
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Dixon, Peter B.
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,DIVISION of labor ,CORE competencies ,ECONOMIC development ,EXPERTISE - Abstract
My impressions of inframarginal economics are: • It is best interpreted as providing underlying support for marginal economics. • Inframarginalists take as self-evident that division of labour and specialisation economies are paramount in economic progress. To justify this, inframarginalists need to develop the empirical side of their field. • Inframarginalists make insufficient use of computers. They specify stylised models, omitting many real-world phenomena that are routinely included in models computed for applied work. Inframarginalists seem wedded to analytical solutions. • Inframarginalists write papers mainly for inframarginalists. They need to demonstrate the value of their work by making it relevant to others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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25. The Validity of the Long-run Heckscher–Ohlin Theorem in the Ricardian System.
- Author
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Uchiyama, Takashi
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,COMPARATIVE advantage (International trade) ,PERFECT competition ,MONOPOLISTIC competition ,ECONOMICS ,HECKSCHER-Ohlin principle ,INTERNATIONAL trade - Abstract
Applying Burgstaller's Ricardian two-sector growth model to the two-country open economy, this paper shows that the long-run Heckscher–Ohlin theorem holds also in a Ricardian world. In addition it is shown that, if two Ricardian countries that are different only in their demand parameters open trade, comparative advantage and the corresponding trade pattern at trade opening continue in the long run after the opening of trade. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. DO THE PHASES OF THE BUSINESS CYCLE DIE OF OLD AGE?
- Author
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Di Venuto, Nicholas and Layton, Allan
- Subjects
BUSINESS cycles ,LOGITS ,ECONOMIC development ,BUSINESS ,ECONOMIC history ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
The paper re-examines the issue of duration dependence in the Australian classical and growth business cycles in light of the somewhat surprising results obtained recently by Cashin and Ouliaris (2004). In so doing the authors use the multinomial logit regime switching modelling approach of Layton and Smith (2003). The paper also represents an extension of the earlier work on the issue undertaken by Bodman (1998); the key extensions being that the issue is framed within an explicit established business cycle chronology, a leading index is also included within the analysis, and the growth cycle, in addition to the classical cycle, is considered. Strong evidence of duration dependence is found for periods of recession within the classical cycle and for both phases of the growth cycle. Moderate evidence of duration dependency is also found for periods of classical cycle expansion. However, the evidence in this regard is significantly reduced once movements in the leading index are included in the analysis with its movements exhibiting strong power in predicting the termination of classical business cycle expansions. For growth cycles, duration dependence symmetry is found across both phases of the cycle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. DUAL ECONOMY MODELS: A PRIMER FOR GROWTH ECONOMISTS.
- Author
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Temple, Jonathan
- Subjects
DUAL economy ,MATHEMATICAL models of economic development ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMISTS ,SOCIAL scientists ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper argues that dual economy models deserve a central place in the analysis of growth in developing countries. The paper shows how these models can be used to analyse the output losses associated with factor misallocation, aggregate growth in the presence of factor market distortions, international differences in sectoral productivity and the potential role of increasing returns to scale. Above all, small-scale general equilibrium models can be used to investigate the interactions between growth and labour markets, to shed new light on the origins of pro-poor and labour-intensive growth, and to explore the role of the informal sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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28. INFLATION UNCERTAINTY AND GROWTH: EVIDENCE FROM PANEL DATA.
- Author
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Apergis, Nicholas
- Subjects
PRICE inflation ,ECONOMIC development ,UNCERTAINTY ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper explores empirically the link between inflation uncertainty and economic growth through a panel data analysis with a data set from OECD economies that covers the period from 1969 to 1999 and the GARCH methodology. The main results point out that inflation uncertainty has an adverse impact on economic growth in the majority of the cases under investigation [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. A North–South model of outsourcing and growth.
- Author
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Saito, Yuki
- Subjects
OFFSHORE assembly industry ,CONTRACTING out ,ECONOMIC development ,WELFARE economics ,FREE trade ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Abstract: In this paper, I formulate a simple North–South R&D‐based growth model where final goods firms in the North endogenously determine the range of international outsourcing of intermediate goods to the South. I show that a fall in the trade cost (through trade liberalization) of intermediate goods in the North: (i) reduces the wage of the North relative to that of the South; (ii) increases the outsourced variety of intermediate goods in the North; and (iii) stimulates Northern R&D activity and economic growth in both countries. By conducting welfare analysis, I also show that a decline in the trade cost of intermediate goods in the North improves welfare in the South more than in the North. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. DOES ICT GENERATE ECONOMIC GROWTH? A META‐REGRESSION ANALYSIS.
- Author
-
Stanley, T. D., Doucouliagos, Hristos, and Steel, Piers
- Subjects
INFORMATION & communication technologies ,ECONOMIC development ,REGRESSION analysis ,ECONOMETRICS ,INTERNET & economics ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Abstract: Despite phenomenal technological progress and exponential growth in computing power, economic growth remains comparative sluggish. In this paper, we investigate two core issues: (1) is there really no connection between ICT and national economic growth? and (2) what factors moderate the ICT–growth relationship? We apply meta‐regression analysis to 466 estimates drawn from 59 econometric studies that explore the Solow or Productivity Paradox that there is little impact of ICT on economic growth and productivity. We explore the differential impact of ICT on developed and developing countries and the differential impact of different types of ICT: landlines, cell phones, computer technology and Internet access. After accommodating potential econometric misspecification bias and publication selection bias, we detect evidence that ICT has indeed contributed positively to economic growth, at least on average. Both developed and developing countries benefit from landline and cell technologies, with cell technologies’ growth effect approximately twice as strong as landlines. However, developed countries gain significantly more from computing than do developing countries. In contrast, we find little evidence that the Internet has had a positive impact on growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Debt Relief for Poor Countries: Conditionality and Effectiveness.
- Author
-
Scholl, Almuth
- Subjects
DEBT relief ,CONDITIONALITY (International relations) ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC impact analysis ,FINANCIAL markets ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper studies the effectiveness of debt relief to stimulate economic growth in the most heavily indebted poor countries. We develop a neoclassical framework with a conflict of interest between the altruistic donor and the recipient government, and model conditionality as an imperfectly enforceable dynamic contract. In contrast to the recent practice of fully cancelling debt, optimal incentive‐compatible conditionality is accompanied by a concessionality level that implies a combination of subsidized loans and outright grants. The optimal concessionality level depends on the recipient's access to international financial markets and on the strength of the conflict of interest. Incentive‐compatible transfers with optimal concessionality levels generate substantial welfare gains. If the donor does not implement the optimal concessionality level and provides subsidized loans only, then the effectiveness of transfers decreases in the long run with severe welfare implications. In contrast, transfers are less effective in the short run if the donor offers outright grants only. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Accounting for the UK Productivity Puzzle: A Decomposition and Predictions.
- Author
-
Goodridge, Peter, Haskel, Jonathan, and Wallis, Gavin
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL productivity ,ECONOMIC development ,LABOR supply ,PREDICTION models ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper revisits the UK productivity puzzle using new data on outputs and inputs and clarifying the role of output mismeasurement, input growth and industry effects. Our data indicate an implied labour productivity gap of 13 percentage points in 2011 relative to the productivity level on pre‐recession trends. We find that: (a) the labour productivity puzzle is a TFP puzzle, since it is not explained by the contributions of labour or capital services; (b) the reallocation of labour between industries deepens rather than explains the puzzle (i.e. there has been a reallocation of hours away from low‐productivity industries and toward high productivity industries); (c) capitalization of R&D does not explain the productivity puzzle; (d) assuming increased scrapping rates since the recession, a 25% (50%) increase in depreciation rates post‐2009 can potentially explain 15% (31%) of the productivity puzzle; (e) industry data show that 35% of the TFP puzzle can be explained by weak TFP growth in the oil & gas and finance sectors; and (f) cyclical effects via factor utilization could potentially explain 17% of the productivity puzzle. Continued weakness in finance would suggest a future lowering of TFP growth to around 0.8% p.a. from a baseline of 0.9% p.a. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Extending the Economic Foundations of Entrepreneurship Research.
- Author
-
McCaffrey, Matthew
- Subjects
SOCIAL enterprises ,SOCIALISM & individualism ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,ECONOMIC development ,UNCERTAINTY - Abstract
As the entrepreneurship discipline grows, it increasingly faces unique research challenges. Recently, ‘interactive, activity based, cognitively hot, compassionate, and prosocial’ approaches to the study of entrepreneurship have arisen to meet these challenges. This paper builds on recent discussions by emphasizing, in addition, the persistent value of economic foundations for a progressive research agenda in entrepreneurship. A realist economic perspective is both fundamental for entrepreneurship and complements newer research trends. It has also stood the test of time: economic questions relating to methodological individualism, uncertainty, judgment, opportunities, social motivations, and incentives have not only set the tone for past research, but continue to offer starting points and insights for contemporary work. This paper thus makes two contributions: first, it explains the relevance of each of these concepts for contemporary work in entrepreneurship studies, and second, it uses them to pose novel research questions. These questions complement the abovementioned emerging trends in entrepreneurship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Abstracts.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC statistics ,ECONOMICS ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,STATISTICS ,FINANCIAL performance ,GROWTH rate ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The article presents a brief summary of some research papers on economics and statistics published in the December 1, 2000 issue of the periodical "Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics." The paper "When Less Is More: Distinguishing Between Entrepreneurial Choice and Performance," by Andrew E. Burke, Felix R. Fitzroy and Michael A. Nolan uses NCDS data on individual characteristics to distinguish determinants of entrepreneurial choice, income and job generation. A new model of utility from self-employment shows that relaxing liquidity constraints could inhibit performance. Another paper "Post-War Growth, Productivity Convergence and Reconstruction," by Werner Smolny shows that aggregate cross-country analyses of the growth process of the industrial countries should take reconstruction effects into account. The enormous growth rates in many European countries and in Japan in the fifties which often appear as outliers in aggregate analyses of productivity convergence can be understood as a catching-up with respect to the past. Neoclassical capital deepening combined with arguments from growth models relying on the stock of knowledge, knowledge spillovers and technological diffusion as the source of economic growth can explain the fast reconstruction after the war, without referring to country-specific growth factors.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. MATCHING PROFIT AND NON-PROFIT NEEDS: HOW NPO s AND COOPERATIVES CONTRIBUTE TO GROWTH IN TIME OF CRISIS. A QUANTITATIVE APPROACH.
- Author
-
VIGANÒ, Federica and SALUSTRI, Andrea
- Subjects
NONPROFIT organizations ,COOPERATIVE societies ,PROFIT measurement ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC models ,MICROECONOMICS ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Copyright of Annals of Public & Cooperative Economics 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
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Diferencias regionales de las primas por calificación en la China urbana. Repercusiones en el crecimiento y en la igualdad.
- Author
-
WHALLEY, John and XING, Chunbing
- Subjects
REGIONAL economic disparities ,ECONOMIC conditions in China, 2000- ,URBANIZATION ,21ST century history ,HISTORY of economic development ,ECONOMIC development ,WAGES ,LABOR mobility ,RURAL-urban differences ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Resumen A partir de datos de encuestas de hogares, los autores observan que las primas por calificación aumentaron en toda China entre 1995 y 2002, pero solo en las provincias costeras entre 2002 y 2007, año en que estas también registraron mayor desigualdad salarial y contribuyeron más a la desigualdad salarial urbana total. Según un modelo de efectos fijos estimado, la privatización explica la evolución del primer periodo, y la integración de China en la economía mundial, la del segundo. Reducir la desigualdad exige, según los autores, la reforma del Registro de Población Hukou, que obstaculiza la movilidad de los trabajadores calificados y posiblemente también el crecimiento. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The Prebisch–Singer thesis: a thesis for the new millennium? Introduction.
- Author
-
Sapsford, David and Chen, John-Ren
- Subjects
ECONOMISTS ,ECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC development ,SCHOLARS ,EDUCATORS - Abstract
The papers contained in this Policy Arena are revised versions of papers originally presented at the University of Innsbruck in Austria on 10th October 1997 at the conference that was convened to celebrate the award to Professor Sir Hans Singer of an honorary doctoral degree of the University in recognition of his outstanding contributions to economic science in general and to the study of economic development in particular. As editors we are indebted to the conference participants (including Sir Hans) for their many helpful comments and suggestions. Particular thanks are due to Dr Richard Hule and Dr Herbert Stocker of the University of Innsbruck and Professor Kunibert Raffer of the University of Vienna for their detailed incisive written comments on the papers as presented at the conference. Although space constraints prevent us from including these documents in this collection, copies are available from the editors upon request. Copyright © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. THE SUITABILITY OF THE DIVISIA INDEX FOR THE MEASUREMENT OF ECONOMIC AGGREGATES.
- Author
-
Usher, D.
- Subjects
INDEX numbers (Economics) ,ECONOMIC development ,MATHEMATICAL models of economic development ,PRODUCTION functions (Economic theory) ,ECONOMIC models ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper considers the properties of the Divisia, or chain-link, index, as they relate to the argument that this is the most appropriate index for use in studying the sources of economic growth. The great advantage of the Divisia index is alleged to be its ‘accuracy’, that is, its capacity to combine time series of prices and quantities to give a true reflection of the height of a utility or production function over time. The paper shows that there are circumstances where the confidence in the accuracy of the Divisia index is justified, but that the conditions required are very restrictive and typically do not obtain in the contexts where the Divisia index is used. Misplaced confidence in the Divisia index has led to errors of interpretation that might otherwise have been avoided, and has given rise to a distorted view of the process of economic growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1974
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Has Abenomics Succeeded in Raising Japan's Inward Foreign Direct Investment?
- Author
-
Hoshi, Takeo
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,FOREIGN investments ,COMMERCIAL policy ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Japan is known to have an exceptionally low level of inward foreign direct investment (FDI). The promotion of inward FDI is one of the policy goals of Abenomics structural reforms. This present paper studies the accumulation of Japan's inward FDI stock during the first 3 years of Abenomics (2012-2015), and finds no evidence that Japan's inward FDI stock increased more than the trend before Abenomics started would have predicted. A comparison of the main policies for promoting inward FDI that have been implemented to the real and perceived impediments to inward FDI reveals that it may be advisable to shift the emphasis of the policy to address more regulatory and administrative issues and to reduce the cost of doing business in Japan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The relationship between trade openness and economic growth: Some new insights on the openness measurement issue.
- Author
-
Huchet‐Bourdon, Marilyne, Le Mouël, Chantal, and Vijil, Mariana
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,ECONOMIC development ,EXPORTS & economics ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,LABOR incentives - Abstract
Abstract: Empirical results on the links between trade openness and economic growth often suggest that, in the long run, more outward‐oriented countries register better economic growth. However, a similar level of trade openness can hide different types of trade structures. The aim of this paper was to enrich the way of measuring trade openness taking into account two different dimensions of countries’ integration in world trade: export quality and export variety. Based on the estimation of an endogenous growth model on a panel of 169 countries between 1988 and 2014 using a generalised method of moments estimator, our results confirm that countries exporting higher quality products and new varieties grow more rapidly. More importantly, we find a non‐linear pattern between the export ratio and the quality of the export basket, suggesting that openness to trade may impact growth negatively for countries which are specialised in low‐quality products. A non‐linear relationship between export variety, the export ratio and growth is also found, suggesting that countries increasing their exports will grow more rapidly after reaching a certain degree of the extensive margin of exports. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Educational attainment and obesity: a systematic review.
- Author
-
Cohen, A. K., Rai, M., Rehkopf, D. H., and Abrams, B.
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL attainment ,OBESITY ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,PUBLIC health ,SOCIAL sciences ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Although previous systematic reviews considered the relationship between socioeconomic status and obesity, almost 200 peer-reviewed articles have been published since the last review on that topic, and this paper focuses specifically on education, which has different implications. The authors systematically review the peer-reviewed literature from around the world considering the association between educational attainment and obesity. Databases from public health and medicine, education, psychology, economics, and other social sciences were searched, and articles published in English, French, Portuguese and Spanish were included. This paper includes 289 articles that report on 410 populations in 91 countries. The relationship between educational attainment and obesity was modified by both gender and the country's economic development level: an inverse association was more common in studies of higher-income countries and a positive association was more common in lower-income countries, with stronger social patterning among women. Relatively few studies reported on lower-income countries, controlled for a comprehensive set of potential confounding variables and/or attempted to assess causality through the use of quasi-experimental designs. Future research should address these gaps to understand if the relationship between educational attainment and obesity may be causal, thus supporting education policy as a tool for obesity prevention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Economic Growth, Gender Wage Gap and Fertility Rebound*.
- Author
-
DAY, CREINA
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,LABOR costs ,PER capita ,FERTILITY ,CHILD care ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Fertility and per capita income are now positively associated across most high income OECD countries. Low fertility and a gender wage gap persist in Japan. This paper presents a model where endogenous increases in the price of child-care and gender equity in the allocation of capital play important roles in the effect of per capita income growth and rising female relative wages on fertility. Results indicate that a positive relationship between fertility and per capita income is not robust: overall fertility rises with female relative wages if child-care productivity is sufficiently high; female relative wages may not rise with per capita income if men work with increasing capital relative to women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The Incidence of Child Health Improvements.
- Author
-
Sahn, David E. and Younger, Stephen D.
- Subjects
CHILDREN'S health ,WELL-being ,ECONOMIC development ,POVERTY ,HEALTH management ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Economic growth accelerated during the first decade of the 2000s in many poor countries, especially in Africa. This welcome news is widely discussed, even in the popular press. Yet as economies grow, some analysts express concerns that such growth is not having as significant an impact on poverty as one would hope. Analysts and policymakers ask whether this growth is adequately pro-poor, shared, or inclusive. Less noticed is that improvements in children's health are accelerating, too. This paper examines the extent to which these health improvements are equitably shared or 'inclusive.' We use a descriptive method, which is analogous to growth incidence curves, and apply it to eight countries from Africa, Asia and Latin America. We draw two principal conclusions. First, within countries, health improvements often have a different distribution than income/expenditure growth, and that distribution is usually more hopeful in the sense that it is more likely to be strongly pro-poor than the distribution of income growth. Second, we have yet to see clear patterns in terms of the within-country relationship between growth incidence curves and health improvement incidence curves. Thus, one cannot rely on the information in the growth incidence curve to infer the inclusiveness of health improvements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Rural out-migration and economic development at origin: A review of the evidence.
- Author
-
Mendola, Mariapia
- Subjects
ECONOMIC impact of emigration & immigration ,EXTENDED families ,LABOR mobility ,ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMICS ,FAMILIES & economics - Abstract
A major feature of the current 'mass migration' process is its strong linkages to countries of origin. Migrants belong to spatially extended families and play a crucial role in shaping economic development in home regions. This paper reviews the wide-ranging socio-economic literature on the nexus between labor migration, both domestic and international, and economic development at origin, with a special focus on out-migration from poor rural regions of developing countries. We disentangle direct effects on migrant-sending households from spillover effects on the rest of the economy, highlighting some key knowledge gaps and policy concerns related to the complex and intimate relation between rural labour mobility and economic behaviour of people left behind. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. MILITARY SPENDING, THREATS AND STOCHASTIC GROWTH.
- Author
-
Lin, Po-Sheng and Lee, Cheng-Te
- Subjects
MILITARY spending ,ECONOMIC development ,SUPPLY & demand ,MARKET volatility ,FINANCIAL risk ,ARMED Forces ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
ABSTRACT This paper analyses the impact of home military spending and foreign military threat on economic growth in a stochastic endogenous growth model involving the supply-side and demand-side effects produced by military spending. The paper states that an increase in home military spending affects economic growth through three channels, including the crowding-out effect, the spin-off effect, and the resource mobilization effect. The net effect which depends on these three channels is ambiguous. Hence, we demonstrate that there exists an optimal defence burden that maximizes the economic growth rate. Furthermore, the optimal defence burden depends on the degree of risk preference. Namely, the optimal defence burden of the risk-loving agent is more than that of the risk-neutral agent, and in turn is more than that of the risk-averse agent. At the same time, we prove that the relationship between the volatility in military spending and economic growth also depends on the degree of risk preference. In addition, we show that greater volatility in foreign military spending leads to a decrease in home aggregate consumption, and hence speeds up economic growth in the home country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. 'Don't mourn; organize' institutions and organizations in the politics and economics of growth and poverty-reduction.
- Author
-
Leftwich, Adrian and Sen, Kunal
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,POVERTY ,SOCIAL institutions ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
It is commonly argued that 'institutions matter' for growth and poverty reduction. While recognising the importance of institutions, it is necessary to go ' beyond institutions' in understanding the factors that promote growth and poverty reduction. This paper draws on the research findings of the IPPG Research Consortium (Improving Institutions for Pro-Poor Growth), some of which are included in this issue, to make the following arguments. We argue, first, that the ways in which economic, political and social institutions interact are crucial in shaping pro-poor development outcomes. Secondly, the establishment of effective institutions also requires the building and strengthening of effective social, political and economic organizations, across sectors and issue areas, which can push for, negotiate, implement and monitor locally appropriate and legitimate institutional arrangements if the aim of poverty reduction is to have sustained traction as a policy goal. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Federalism, Fertility, and Growth.
- Author
-
Borck, Rainald
- Subjects
FEDERAL government ,EDUCATIONAL finance ,FERTILITY ,HUMAN capital ,ECONOMIC development ,SAVINGS ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper analyses the effect of federalism on fertility and growth. In a model with human capital accumulation and endogenous fertility, two regimes of education finance are compared: central and local. I find that local education finance yields higher growth at the price of increased inequality. The effect of federalism on total and differential fertility rates depends on the elasticity of substitution between children and consumption. The paper also empirically examines the relationship between fertility rates and fiscal decentralisation on a panel of OECD countries and finds a weak negative effect of decentralisation on total and differential (poor minus rich) fertility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. China as Number One: How about the Renminbi?
- Author
-
Ito, Takatoshi
- Subjects
RENMINBI ,ECONOMIC development ,DEMOGRAPHIC change ,GROSS domestic product ,GROWTH rate ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Using simulations projecting Chinese economic growth into the future, this paper first examines when China will overtake the USA to become the largest economy. Demographic changes that affect economic growth are taken into consideration in these projections. China is expected to become number one sometime in the mid-2020s, unless its growth rate of gross domestic product per worker declines dramatically, à la the lost decade of Japan. Next, the paper examines whether China becoming the number one economy will mean its currency, the renminbi (RMB), will become the international key currency. According to the basket currency regressions during the period that Chinese currency was gradually appreciating against the US dollar from July 2005 to August 2008, it is shown that the RMB has already acquired a strong influence on the Asian currencies. This shows that the RMB is fast gaining the status of a regional anchor currency for a possible regional joint float. As the Chinese government proceeds with internationalization of its currency, the RMB is expected to gain in the ranking of other aspects of international currency, such as the store of value and the medium of exchange. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Economics of Human Trafficking.
- Author
-
Wheaton, Elizabeth M., Schauer, Edward J., and Galli, Thomas V.
- Subjects
HUMAN trafficking ,SLAVERY ,HUMAN trafficking victims ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC impact of emigration & immigration ,LABOR policy ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Because freedom of choice and economic gain are at the heart of productivity, human trafficking impedes national and international economic growth. Within the next 10 years, crime experts expect human trafficking to surpass drug and arms trafficking in its incidence, cost to human well-being, and profitability to criminals ( Schauer and Wheaton, 2006: 164–165 ). The loss of agency from human trafficking as well as from modern slavery is the result of human vulnerability ( Bales, 2000: 15 ). As people become vulnerable to exploitation and businesses continually seek the lowest-cost labour sources, trafficking human beings generates profit and a market for human trafficking is created. This paper presents an economic model of human trafficking that encompasses all known economic factors that affect human trafficking both across and within national borders. We envision human trafficking as a monopolistically competitive industry in which traffickers act as intermediaries between vulnerable individuals and employers by supplying differentiated products to employers. In the human trafficking market, the consumers are employers of trafficked labour and the products are human beings. Using a rational-choice framework of human trafficking we explain the social situations that shape relocation and working decisions of vulnerable populations leading to human trafficking, the impetus for being a trafficker, and the decisions by employers of trafficked individuals. The goal of this paper is to provide a common ground upon which policymakers and researchers can collaborate to decrease the incidence of trafficking in humans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Ecological economics and economic growth.
- Author
-
Victor, Peter A.
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,ECOLOGICAL economics ,ECOSYSTEM services ,ECONOMIC development ,BIOSPHERE ,GROSS domestic product - Abstract
Boulding's 1966 paper on the economics of spaceship Earth established the framework for ecological economics and an understanding of economic growth. In ecological economics, economies are conceptualized as open subsystems of the closed biosphere and are subject to biophysical laws and constraints. Economic growth measured as an increase in real gross domestic product (GDP) has generally been associated with increases in the use of energy and materials and the generation of wastes. Scale, composition, and technology are the proximate determinants of environmental impacts. They are often reduced to two: scale (GDP) and intensity (impact per unit GDP). New work described in this paper defines “green” growth as intensity that declines faster than scale increases. Similarly, “brown” growth occurs when intensity declines more slowly than increases in scale, and “black” growth happens when both scale and intensity increase. These concepts are then related to the environmental Kuznets curve, which can be understood as a transition from brown to green growth. Ecological economics provides a macroperspective on economic growth. It offers broad policy principles, and it challenges the primacy of economic growth as a policy objective, but many important questions remain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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