Search results for "ample"

showing 10 items of 2398 documents

The democratization process: An empirical appraisal of the role of political protest

2020

Abstract This paper analyses the role of peaceful and violent protest in the democratization process. We interpret the democratization process as a sequence of phases so as to allow citizens' and elites' preferences for democracy to vary according to the particular phase that a country is experiencing. By doing so we jointly model the probability of protest and of moving through different phases of democracy taking into account time-constant and time-varying unobserved heterogeneity. In particular, we develop a multivariate finite mixture model that introduces a latent variable to capture unobservable factors. On a sample of 171 countries from 1971 to 2010, we provide evidence that protest …

Economics and EconometricsDemocratization processProcess (engineering)media_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesSample (statistics)Latent variableUnobservableDemocracy0506 political scienceDemocratic consolidationPoliticsPeaceful and violent protestUnobserved heterogeneityPolitical sciencePolitical economy0502 economics and businessPolitical Science and International Relations050602 political science & public administrationDemocratization050207 economicsmedia_commonEuropean Journal of Political Economy
researchProduct

Balance sheet versus earnings conservatism in Europe

2004

In this study we extend prior research on the international analysis of accounting conservatism (Joos and Lang, 1994; Ball et al., 2000; Giner and Rees, 2001), by examining the level of accounting conservatism across eight European countries (United Kingdom, Germany, France, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain and Belgium), and assessing the statistical significance of the differences among them. The definitions of conservatism that we use are, on the one hand, the Feltham and Ohlson (1995) definition, which implies a persistent understatement of book value of shareholders' equity (balance sheet conservatism). On the other hand, we use the one proposed by Basu (1997), that is, a time…

Economics and EconometricsEarningsbusiness.industryEconomics Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)AccountingConservatismAccounting conservatismSample compositionShareholderRequest permissionsAccountingEconomicsBusiness Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)Balance sheetOrder reprintsBusiness and International ManagementBook valueUnderstatementbusinessFinanceEmpresa
researchProduct

Income Inequality and Technology Diffusion: Evidence from Developing Countries*

2011

We study the effect of within-country income inequality on the diffusion of mobile phones using data on market penetration in a sample of developing countries from 1985 to 1998. Mobile phones are an example of international technology, originating in industrialized countries and diffusing worldwide. We find that income inequality, as measured by the income share of the highest earning deciles, has a positive effect on the early diffusion of mobile phones and that the estimated effect becomes greater when a measure of agricultural endowments is used as an instrument. The instrumental variable results are robust to weak instruments. Our findings suggest that the diffusion of new technologies …

Economics and EconometricsEconomic growthInequalityEmerging technologiesmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesInstrumental variable1. No povertyDeveloping countrySample (statistics)Economic inequality8. Economic growth0502 economics and businessEconomicsDemographic economics050207 economicsDeveloped country050205 econometrics media_commonMarket penetrationScandinavian Journal of Economics
researchProduct

Temporary contracts and young women in Spain

2008

In this article we analyse the determinants of temporary employment through a balanced panel of workers from 1995 to 2000. First, we estimate a panel with 1267 individuals with ages ranging from 16 to 65 years. We obtain that the probability of having a temporary contract increases for people younger than 46 years old. Secondly, we estimate separately the sample of people younger than 46 years old and we obtain that the probability of temporality increases for young people with university level of education. More interestedly, the probability of being in a temporary contract is smaller for young women that for young men in Spain.

Economics and EconometricsEconomicsUniversity levelSample (statistics)TemporalityDemography
researchProduct

TERRORISM AND INTERNATIONAL TOURISM: NEW EVIDENCE

2008

This paper analyses the impact of terrorist activity on international tourist flows. To this end, we have estimated a cross‐sectional gravity equation for tourism from the G‐7 countries to a sample of 134 destinations over the period 2001–2003. Within this framework, we evaluate the deviation from ‘normal’ tourist flows due to terrorist activity, which is considered as negative advertising for the affected country. The analysis suggests that both domestic victims and international attacks are relevant factors when foreign tourists make their choice. This result is robust under alternative specifications. Moreover, the impact of terrorism is more severe in developing countries. The author is…

Economics and EconometricsEconomyGravity model of tradeDomestic terrorismTerrorismNegative advertisingEconomicsDeveloping countrySample (statistics)DestinationsSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)TourismDefence and Peace Economics
researchProduct

Lo sviluppo sostenibile della pesca nella marineria di Mazara del Vallo

2011

In a place like Sicily, where sea fishing and port activities are part of the territory, history and culture, fishery has always been vital to man and, for this reason, today it must be studied, protected and helped in the difficult transition towards long-term sustainability. Fishing is a driving sector for Mazara economy both for number of working days during the fishing season, and for industrial activities operating around this field (transformation, packaging, and distribution). A micro-economic analysis was carried on a sample of fishing enterprises in order to analyze the problems of the here studied seamanship. The analysis is based on the employers’ interviews. The collected data h…

Economics and EconometricsEngineeringbusiness.industryFishingDistribution (economics)Sample (statistics)Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)Port (computer networking)Product (business)EconomySettore AGR/01 - Economia Ed Estimo RuraleSustainabilityeconomics fshery sustainable developmentBalance sheetbusinessAgronomy and Crop ScienceSeamanshipECONOMIA AGRO-ALIMENTARE
researchProduct

Founding family leadership and industry profitability

2008

Published version of an article from the journal: Small Business Economics In this article, we argue that firms in high-margin industries can benefit from founding family influence. Specifically, in more profitable markets, the influence of the founding family provides an additional corporate governance-monitoring function. The sample consists of 294 firm-year observations from 98 publicly traded companies headquartered in Sweden, representing approximately half of all non-financial traded firms. Our support that the effect of family leadership in publicly held firms should be assessed in relation to the intensity of industry competition

Economics and EconometricsEntrepreneurshipCorporate governancemedia_common.quotation_subjectSample (statistics)General Business Management and AccountingCompetition (economics)Market economyEconomicsProfitability indexMarketingFunction (engineering)VDP::Social science: 200::Economics: 210::Business: 213media_common
researchProduct

Does social capital matter for European regional growth?

2015

Abstract This paper analyzes the role of different elements of social capital in economic growth for a sample of 85 European regions during the period 1995–2008. Despite the remarkable progress that social capital and European regional economic growth literatures have experienced over the last two decades, initiatives combining the two are few, and entirely yet to come for the post-1990s period. Recent improvements in data availability allow this gap in the literature to be closed, since they enable the researcher to consider the traditionally disregarded Eastern and Central European (ECE) regions. This is particularly interesting, as they are all transition economies that recently joined t…

Economics and EconometricsEuropean regionsBayesian inferenceSample (statistics)Social mobilitySocial reproductionEconomySocial capitalEconomicsmedia_common.cataloged_instanceEconomic geographyEuropean unionBayesian paradigmFinancePeriod (music)Social trustEconomic growthSocial capitalmedia_common
researchProduct

Financial development and intergenerational education mobility

2018

Using years of education as a measure of status, we study the relationship between financial development and intergenerational mobility, focusing on human capital investments boosted by financial deepening. We consider a set of indices to capture different components of the overall intergenerational education mobility. Using a sample of 39 countries, we find that financial development is related to structural mobility but not to exchange mobility. In particular, while we detect an inverted U-shaped relationship between financial development and structural mobility, we do not find any significant relationship with exchange mobility. Keywords: Intergenerational mobility, Financial development…

Economics and EconometricsFinancial development05 social sciencesSample (statistics)Financial developmentSocial mobilityHuman capitallcsh:HD72-88Financial deepeninglcsh:Economic growth development planningIntergenerational mobilitySettore SECS-S/06 -Metodi Mat. dell'Economia e d. Scienze Attuariali e Finanz.lcsh:Financelcsh:HG1-99990502 economics and businessEconomicsDemographic economicsEquality of opportunitie050207 economicsFinanceHuman capital investment050205 econometrics
researchProduct

On measuring speculative and hedging activities in futures markets from volume and open interest data

2010

This paper provides a critical assessment of the line of research that measures speculative and hedging activities in futures markets from volume and open interest data. It makes several contributions. First, a detailed theoretical analysis of the measures proposed in the previous literature as proxies for speculative activity clarifies the circumstances in which they fail, as well as the assumptions that have to be made, when they are used as intended. Second, we propose a new way of combining the volume and the open interest figures, which provides additional information regarding the type of trading activity that takes place in the market on a given date. Finally, we analyse empirically …

Economics and EconometricsFinancial economicsEconomicsStock index futuresVolume (computing)WirtschaftSample (statistics)Political Economyspeculation; hedging; futures marketsVolkswirtschaftslehreOpen interest (futures)Economicsddc:330Forward marketCritical assessmentSpeculationFutures contract
researchProduct