Search results for "CAPI"

showing 10 items of 2622 documents

CHANGES IN FARMERS’ PARTICIPATION IN RURAL ORGANIZATIONS OF OPOLSZCZYZNA REGION

2016

Economic growthBusinessSocial capitalJournal of Agribusiness and Rural Development
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The Real Effects of Bank Branch Deregulation at Various Stages of Economic Development: The European Experience

2011

This paper provides evidence on the links between financial deregulation and economic performance in a European context. Specifically, we study the relaxation of bank branching restrictions in Spain which triggered off a remarkable inter-regional expansion of savings banks which was coincidental with an unprecedented period of sustained growth. Although related questions have been largely investigated for the US, the European experiences remain largely unexplored. An additional contribution is the use of quantile regression techniques which, unlike traditional OLS regression analysis, do not focus on the “average effect for the average province”. This change of focus helps to overcome the d…

Economic growthDeregulationOrdinary least squaresEconomicsFinancial deregulationContext (language use)Capital intensityMonetary economicsPer capita incomeProductivityQuantile regressionSSRN Electronic Journal
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The Mechanics of Progress in Education: Evidence from Cross-Country Data

1998

The document examines first the relationship between a number of indicators concerning a country system of education (global and per-pupil public resources by level of schooling, education coverage, quality of educational outcomes, efficiency in student flow, external efficiency, equity by gender and in resource allocation, ..) and and its environment (overall sector context, demographic pressure fiscal, capacity, structure of employment, ..) on the one hand, its level of economic development on the other. The paper analyzes how the economic development affects the amount of resources mobilized for the sector with the finding that the main source of resources lies in the decrease of the tea…

Economic growthDéveloppement économique[SHS.EDU]Humanities and Social Sciences/Education[SHS.EDU] Humanities and Social Sciences/EducationPrimary educationDistribution (economics)Context (language use)Student–teacher ratioRessource de l'éducationPolitical science0502 economics and businessPer capitaEnvironnement économique050207 economics10. No inequalityEffetEquity (economics)business.industry05 social sciencesPolitique éducative1. No poverty050301 educationIndicateur de performancePer capita incomeTeaching and LearningCurriculum&InstructionPublic Health PromotionPublic Sector Economics&FinanceDecentralizationGender and EducationPrimary EducationHealth Monitoring&EvaluationTeaching and LearningCurriculum&InstructionSystème éducatifEducational attainmentChangement8. Economic growthDemographic economicsbusiness0503 education
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Optimal Sustainable Policies Under Pollution Ceiling: the Demographic Side

2014

AD; International audience; We study optimal sustainable policies in a benchmark logistic world (where both population and technological progress follow logistic laws of motion) subject to a pollution ceiling. The main policy in the hands of the benevolent planner is pollution abatement, ultimately leading to the control of a dirtiness index as in the early literature of the limits to growth literature. Besides inclusion of demographic dynamics, we also hypothesize that population size affects negatively the natural regeneration or assimilation rate, as a side product of human activities (like increasing pollution, deforestation, ...). We first characterize optimal sustainable policies. Und…

Economic growthEngineeringNatural resource economicsPopulationLimits to growth Sustainable policy Optimal growth Demographic dynamics Pollution ceilingLimits to growthpollution ceiling[SHS]Humanities and Social SciencesDemographic dynamicslimits to growth11. SustainabilityOptimal growthPer capitaPopulation growthsustainable policyeducation[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceConsumption (economics)education.field_of_studylimits to growthsustainable policyoptimal growthdemographic dynamicspollution ceilingTechnological changebusiness.industryApplied MathematicsPopulation sizePollution ceiling15. Life on land[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceTechnical progressProjections of population growth13. Climate actionModeling and SimulationSustainable policybusinessoptimal growthdemographic dynamics
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Wealth, Competitiveness, and Intellectual Capital – Sources for Economic Development

2015

Abstract National wealth, national competitiveness and national intellectual capital were major objectives of a nation in the last century. By this paper we identify strong interrelations between national wealth, national competitiveness and national intellectual capital according to Pearson, R and R 2 results. These interrelations demonstrate that national wealth, national competitiveness and intellectual capital are important sources for increasing the economic development based on data from 40 developed, emerging and developing countries.

Economic growthGeneral EngineeringEconomicsEnergy Engineering and Power TechnologyNational wealthDeveloping countryinterrelationsnational competitivenessnational wealtnational intellectual capitalIntellectual capitalProcedia Economics and Finance
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Migration, Productive Return and Human Capital: Lessons from the new Governmental Policy on Migration in Ecuador

2017

In 2008, the Government of Ecuador initiated a programme for productive return dubbed the Cucayo Fund, aimed at financing small businesses for migrants who were returning to the country. This programme has been a cornerstone in the new governmental policy on migration. In 2015, the IOM considered it an exemplary practice among the instruments enabling the economic and social reinsertion of returning migrants. In this article, based on the mining and analysis of the implementation data from the Cucayo Fund in the three provinces comprising Administrative Region No 7, we specifically examine the incidence of human capital accumulated by the migrants in the success of their ventures. Our resul…

Economic growthGovernmentHuman migrationbusiness.industry05 social sciences050602 political science & public administration0507 social and economic geographyCornerstonebusiness050703 geographyHuman capital0506 political scienceDemographyInternational Migration
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The European Round Table of Industrialists and the restructuring of European higher education

2014

The restructuring of European higher education (EHE) since the 1980s is a widely studied subject. However, this paper argues that previous studies have paid insufficient attention to the role of transnational policy-making groups in this complex and multilevel process. This argument is supported by focusing on how the European Round Table of Industrialists (ERT) has participated in this restructuring since the mid-1980s. This paper's focus is especially in two ERT documents that were published in the 1980s. The main finding is that the current restructuring of EHE reflects interests of the ERT that represents the emerging transnational capitalist class (TCC) at European level.

Economic growthHigher educationTransnational capitalist classbusiness.industryRestructuringSubject (philosophy)European studiesEducationSocial systemArgumentPolitical economyProfessional associationSociologybusinessGlobalisation, Societies and Education
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Between a ‘student abroad’ and ‘being from Latvia’: inequalities of access, prestige, and foreign-earned cultural capital

2017

This paper visualises tertiary-level students who study abroad as simultaneously both international students and members of an emerging diaspora. Coming from a country (Latvia) which is peripheral and relatively poor by European standards, students go abroad for multiple reasons not necessarily directly connected with study (e.g. family reasons, labour migration); yet their evolving diasporic status is instrumentalised by the Latvian government which wants them to return and contribute to the country’s development. Based on 27 in-depth interviews with Latvian students and graduates who have studied abroad, our analysis focuses on three interlinked dimensions of inequality: access to educati…

Economic growthHigher educationbusiness.industryPrestige05 social sciences0507 social and economic geography050301 educationLatvianHomelandStudy abroadCultural capitallanguage.human_languageDilemmaGlobalizationArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)languageSociologySocial sciencebusiness050703 geography0503 educationDemography
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Social class and university graduates’ overqualification: testing two mediated relationships

2018

[EN] University graduates’ overqualification (i.e., having more education, qualification and/or skills than one’s job requires) has important negative consequences. However, much less is known about its antecedents. This represents an important gap in the literature. In order to fill this gap, the goal of this study is to test a mediational model on the antecedents of university graduates’ overqualification (OQ). We posit that social class is negatively related to OQ through two mediational links: a) via social capital, and b) via social capital and tolerance towards OQ. The results obtained in a sample of 144 university graduates provided support for the second mediational link, so that so…

Economic growthHigher educationbusiness.industryTeachingEducational systemsOverqualificationHigher EducationSocial classSocial classTolerance towards overqualificationSocial capitalWork (electrical)Agency (sociology)LearningOverqualificationChristian ministrySociologybusinessEducational systemsSocial capitalProceedings of the 4th International Conference on Higher Education Advances (HEAd'18)
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Are Universities Ready to Face the Knowledge-Based Economy?

2002

It is generally agreed that the two main functions of universities are to transmit high level knowledge and to produce new knowledge. For centuries, these two functions were performed in a context in which only a small share of the relevant age cohort attended higher education institutions. After the Second World War, this context changed radically and higher education began to face more or less continuous growth. This has led to the situation that, in the developed economies, more than 40 per cent of the younger generation now attend third-level institutions (cf. Teichler, 2000).

Economic growthHigher educationbusiness.industry[SHS.EDU]Humanities and Social Sciences/Education4. EducationKnowledge economy[SHS.EDU] Humanities and Social Sciences/Education05 social sciencesWorld War IIHigh educationFace (sociological concept)Context (language use)[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance050905 science studiesHuman capitalEnseignement supérieurUniversitéPolitical science0502 economics and business0509 other social sciences[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinancebusinessComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSÉconomie de la connaissance050203 business & management
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