Search results for "CAPI"

showing 10 items of 2622 documents

A Critical Analysis of the Intellectual Capital Measuring, Managing, and Reporting Practices in the Non-profit Sector: Lessons Learnt from a Case Stu…

2014

In management literature, intellectual capital (IC) is considered the key driver of the competitive advantage of the third millennium enterprise firm; consequently, measuring, managing and reporting IC has become a critical issue. Frameworks addressed to measure and report IC have proliferated, nevertheless the adoption of these frameworks is not so widespread in practice. The strong call for critically investigating IC practices has been raised by several leading authors in the area. Doing a critical and performative IC research means empirically researching IC organisational practices in specific contexts, in order to increase the understanding of the IC dynamics. By critically analysing …

Economics and Econometricsbusiness.industryPerformative utteranceAccountingAuditNon profitGeneral Business Management and AccountingCompetitive advantagenon-profit organizationIntellectual capitalcase studyArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Intellectual capitalOrder (exchange)EconomicsBusiness and International ManagementBusiness ethicsbusinessLawReporting systemJournal of Business Ethics
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Audit fees and cost of debt: differences in the credibility of voluntary and mandatory audits

2019

Despite the extensive research on audit fees, few studies have examined the effect of audit fees on the cost of debt. Based on the credence goods theory, we examine whether the effect of audits on the cost of debt is affected by the type of audit (voluntary or mandatory) and the audit fees, as well as whether there is a combined effect of voluntary audits and audit fees, so that the effect of voluntary audits on the cost of debt is affected by audit fees. Using a sample of Spanish SMEs, we find an asymmetric effect of audit fees on the cost of debt: higher audit fees are associated with a lower cost of debt for voluntarily audited companies, while the association is not significant for mand…

Economics and Econometricsbusiness.industryaudit feesvoluntary auditsAccountingAuditlcsh:Regional economics. Space in economicsauditinglcsh:HD72-88lcsh:HT388credibilitylcsh:Economic growth development planningCredence goodTurnoverCost of capitalhealth services administrationsmesCredibilitycost of debtBusinessAuditing; audit fees; credibility; voluntary audits; cost of debt; SMEshealth care economics and organizationsEconomic Research-Ekonomska Istraživanja
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The regulatory environment and financial constraints of private firms in the European Union

2023

This study analyzes the influence of the institutional environment on firms' capital structure in the European Union (EU). Unlike other research, we focus on private firms and include data from all EU countries from 2010 to 2018. We split the sample into groups of small and large firms, which we consider financially constrained and unconstrained, respectively. Throughout the study, we posit that institutional effects on financing policies vary with size, with the effects being greater for constrained firms as they face more financing frictions. We also run regression models controlling for firm-level characteristics and relevant macroeconomic factors. Our findings reveal that a high-quality…

Economics and Econometricscapital structureprivate firmsUNESCO::CIENCIAS ECONÓMICASinstitutional environmentfinancial constraintssizeFinance
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Trends and Breaks in Per-Capita Carbon Dioxide Emissions, 1870-2028

2004

We consider per-capita carbon dioxide emission trends in 16 early industrialized countries over the period 1870-2028. Using a multiple-break time series method we find more evidence for very early downturns in per-capita trends than for late downturns during the oil price shocks of the 1970s. Only for two countries do downturns in trends imply downward sloping stable trends. We also consider trends in emission composition and find little evidence for in-sample peaks for emissions from liquid and gaseous fuel uses. These results lead us to reject the oil price shocks as events causing permanent breaks in the structure and level of emissions, a conclusion often made in analyses using shorter …

Economics and Econometricschemistry.chemical_compoundGeneral EnergychemistryEconomyFuel gasCarbon dioxideTime series approachEconomicsPer capitaMonetary economicsOil priceThe Energy Journal
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50 years of capital mobility in the eurozone: breaking the Feldstein-Horioka puzzle

2021

AbstractThis paper assesses capital mobility for the Eurozone countries by studying the long-run relationship between domestic investment and savings for the period 1970-2019. Our main goal is to analyze the impact of economic events on capital mobility during this period. We apply the cointegration methodology in a setting that allows us to identify endogenous breaks in the long-run saving-investment relationship. Precisely, the breaks coincide with relevant economic events. We find a downward trend in the saving-investment retention since the 70s for the so-called “core countries”, whereas this trend is not so evident in the peripheral, where the financial and sovereign crises have had a …

Economics and Econometricscointegrationmultiple structural breaksF36UNESCO::CIENCIAS ECONÓMICASunit rootsF45feldstein-horioka puzzle:CIENCIAS ECONÓMICAS [UNESCO]capital mobilityFeldstein-horioka puzzleO16
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Anti-Malthus: Conflict and the Evolution of Societies

2013

The Malthusian theory of evolution disregards a pervasive fact about human societies: they expand through conflict. When this is taken account of the long-run favors not a large population at the level of subsistence, nor yet institutions that maximize welfare or per capita output, but rather institutions that generate large amount of free resources and direct these towards state power. Free resources are the output available to society after deducting the payments necessary for subsistence and for the incentives needed to induce production, and the other claims to production such as transfer payments and resources absorbed by elites. We develop the evolutionary underpinnings of this model,…

Economics and Econometricseducation.field_of_studyConflictEvolutionmedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationSubsistence agriculturePer capita incomeMicroeconomicsIncentiveMalthuTransfer paymentDevelopment economicsPer capitaEconomicsProduction (economics)educationWelfareDemographymedia_common
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Inequality in Spain 1973-91: Contribution to a regional database

2001

This paper provides the methodology and results of a database of inequality indices for the fifty provinces and seventeen regions of Spain on the basis of the Household Budget Surveys for the years 1973/74, 1980/81 and 1990/91. The inequality indicators considered are the indices of Gini, Theil (0), Theil (1) and Atkinson (1), as well as the distribution by deciles of the population. These indicators are drawn up for three variables: total income, total expenditure, and exclusively monetary expenditure. The variables are also expressed in terms of households, per capita and per capita equivalent. All are available on the Internet (http://www.ivie.es).

Economics and Econometricseducation.field_of_studyDatabaseInequalitybusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationTotal incomeDistribution (economics)computer.software_genreDecileIncome inequality metricsEconomicsPer capitabusinesseducationcomputermedia_common
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Higher education and prosperity: from catholic missionaries to luminosity in India

2017

The article of record as published may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ecoj.12551 This article estimates the impact of completed higher education on economic prosperity across Indian districts. To address the endogeneity of higher education, we use the location of Catholic missionaries circa 1911 as an instrument. Catholics constitute a very small share of the population in India and their influence beyond higher education has been limited. Our instrumental variable results find a positive effect of higher education on development, as measured by light density. The results are robust to alternative measures of development, and are not driven by lower levels of schooling or other chann…

Economics and Econometricseducation.field_of_studyHigher educationbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesInstrumental variablePopulationHuman capital0502 economics and businessDevelopment economicsEconomicsEndogeneityProsperity050207 economicseducationbusiness050205 econometrics media_common
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Demographic structure and the security of property rights: The role of development and democracy

2013

Abstract It is often argued that countries with a high population share of children and young workers should attract large capital inflows from aging industrialized economies. However, many of these countries deter foreign investors by a high risk of creeping or outright expropriation. In this paper we explore whether the correlation between countries' demographic structure and the perceived security of property rights reflects a causal relationship. We show that, in low-income countries, the ratio of young to old workers has a positive effect on the perceived security of property rights if the political system is sufficiently democratic. By contrast, this relationship cannot be observed in…

Economics and Econometricseducation.field_of_studymedia_common.quotation_subjectMiddle income countriesPopulationDemocracyMarket economyPolitical systemExpropriationProperty rightsCapital (economics)Political Science and International RelationsDevelopment economicsEconomicseducationDemographic structuremedia_commonEuropean Journal of Political Economy
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The scarcity of worker cooperatives in the USA: enquiring into possible causes

2018

Even though the access of workers to capital has been promoted in some countries for over centuries, Governments and public bodies have started to promote it worldwide, as in previous occasions, more particularly as an aftermath of the Great Recession, usually in the form of worker cooperatives.However, workers’ access to capital in the USA in the form of worker cooperatives is still surprisingly rare. We cannot find any recent public policies at a federal level in order to promote them and the old ones that exist remain mostly obsolete and unknown. Only at a state and local level, we find in the latest years a series of actions directed to achieve this goal, as in the case of New York City…

Economics and Econometricsgenetic structuresSociology and Political Sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectPublic policyUNESCO::CIENCIAS ECONÓMICAS:CIENCIAS ECONÓMICAS [UNESCO]Great recessionScarcityState (polity)Order (exchange)Federal levelCapital (economics)Development economicsBusinessmedia_commonCIRIEC-España, revista de economía pública, social y cooperativa
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