Search results for "econometrics"

showing 10 items of 3730 documents

Hard currency indebtedness of the developed socialist countries

1985

In recent years the problems of the indebtedness of the communist countries have been driven somewhat into the background by the high foreign indebtedness of many developing countries and the attention attracted by the balance of payments crises in Brazil and Mexico. Yet there are many indications that the need for the socialist debtor nations to adjust their balance of payments policy has not lessened but, to a large extent, simply been deferred. It is therefore not unlikely that the 1980s will witness a new need to solve the problems of those nations and their creditors in the West.

Communist stateEconomic policyCreditorEconomics Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)Developing countryInternational economicsDebtorExternal debtHard currencyBalance of paymentsddc:330EconomicsBusiness Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)Foreign exchange marketCMEAIntereconomics
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The determinants of efficiency: the case of the Spanish industry

2002

The aim of this paper is to analyse the factors explaining the technical efficiency of Spanish industrial sectors during the period 1991–1994 using the Survey of Business Strategies (SBE) of the Ministry of Industry and Energy. It analyses whether efficiency can be explained by factors external to the firm such as the degree of competition in the markets in which it operates, characteristics of the firm (size, organization, advantages of location, participation of public capital, etc.), as well as the effects of dynamic disturbances that may affect the degree of utilization of the productive capacity.

Competition (economics)Economics and EconometricsCommerceProductive capacityEconomicsChristian ministryPublic capitalAffect (psychology)Industrial organizationApplied Economics
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Stefano Battilossi y Youseef Cassis (eds.): European Banks and the American Challenge. Competition and Cooperation in International Banking under Bre…

2002

Competition (economics)Economics and EconometricsHistoryInternational bankingEconomybiologyPolitical scienceCassisEconomic historybiology.organism_classificationRevista de Historia Económica / Journal of Iberian and Latin American Economic History
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Competition and product survival in the UK car market

2005

The paper examines the extent to which inter- and intra-firm competition influenced the survival of cars in the UK market between 1971 and 1998. It is shown that, while competition influenced product survival in all market segments within the UK car market, the nature of that competition differed between them. In the small family and large family car segments, intra-firm competition dominated inter-firm competition. In contrast, in the luxury/sports car segment only inter-firm competition conditions resulted in product survival. Evidence was also found that the luxury/sports car segment has grown more competitive over time and that firms marketing products in the family car segments have be…

Competition (economics)Economics and EconometricsMarket segmentationEconomicsProduct (category theory)Industrial organizationApplied Economics
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THE SURVIVAL OF DIFFERENTIATED PRODUCTS: AN APPLICATION TO THE UK AUTOMOBILE MARKET, 1971-2002*

2009

We investigate how competition affected the survival of products in the UK automobile market between 1971 and 2002. We find, after using a host of controls to account for product characteristics and changes in market structure, that (i) within and between firm spatial competition significantly reduces the life of a model, (ii) initial product differentiation and variant proliferation obviate competition, and (iii) product innovation significantly extends model survival.

Competition (economics)Economics and EconometricsMarket structureProduct innovationAutomobile marketEconomicsProduct differentiationProduct characteristicsIndustrial organizationThe Manchester School
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Technical efficiency and the vertical boundaries of the firm: theory and evidence

2013

This article provides a theoretical and empirical analysis of the relationship between firms’ technical efficiency and the vertical organization of production. Technical inefficiency is explicitly introduced as the source of firms’ heterogeneity in a Bertrand–Nash model of industry competition: the main prediction of the model is that the most efficient firms choose vertical integrated structures and the less-efficient ones choose disintegrated structures. The empirical part of the article rests on a stochastic frontier analysis (SFA) in a sample of about 400 Italian machine tool (MT) builders, and the result supports the prediction of the theoretical model.

Competition (economics)Economics and EconometricsStochastic frontier analysisbusiness.product_categoryEconomicsProduction (economics)Sample (statistics)businessInefficiencyVertical integrationIndustrial organizationMachine toolApplied Economics Letters
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Pure Component Pricing in a Duopoly

2002

In this paper, we focus on price competition between several multiproduct firms which produce differentiated systems, each consisting of two complementary products. It is shown here that if firms are restricted to pure component pricing (bundling is not allowed) whenever components produced are compatible, pure strategy equilibrium may not exist. With the use of bundling strategies, pure strategy equilibrium always exists. For the pure component pricing case we provide a full characterization for the existence of a pure strategy equilibrium.

Competition (economics)Economics and EconometricsStrategyComponent (UML)EconomicsDuopolyMathematical economicsComplementary goodThe Manchester School
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Evolución de la eficiencia técnica de la industria textil española en el periodo 1995-2005. Análisis mediante un modelo frontera estocástica*

2021

La industria textil española, con un peso relativo importante en la manufactura, se encuentra sumida en una profunda crisis como consecuencia de la cada vez más agresiva e intensa competencia ejercida por los países productores de bajo coste. Si bien la eficiencia no agota el conjunto de estrategias para ser competitivo, la presencia de competidores induce a su búsqueda (Porter, 1990). En este trabajo se examina la evolución de la eficiencia técnica del textil español. Con tal finalidad, para el periodo 1995-2005 y cada uno de los siete grupos de actividad en que puede subdividirse la industria textil, se estima una frontera de producción estocástica de tipo translog. Los resultados empíric…

Competition (economics)Economics and EconometricsTextile industryEngineeringEconomyLiberalizationbusiness.industryWelfare economicsCompetitor analysisProduction–possibility frontierbusinessInefficiencyStudies of Applied Economics
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Credit risk and efficiency in the European banking system: A three-stage analysis

2002

Increased competition and the attempts of European banks to increase their presence in other markets may have affected the efficiency and credit risk in the banking system. The first aspect is the incentive in reducing costs in order to gain in competitiveness. The second is associated with their lack of knowledge of such markets and/ or acceptance of a higher risk in order to increase their market share. Despite the importance of these aspects, banking literature has usually analysed the effects of competition on the efficiency of banking systems without considering these aspects. The few studies that attempt to obtain risk adjusted efficiency measures do not consider that part of the risk…

Competition (economics)Economics and EconometricsThree stageIncentiveOrder (exchange)Financial economicsEconomicsFinancial risk managementMonetary economicsMarket shareFinanceSystem aCredit riskApplied Financial Economics
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Empirical Evidence on the Relationship between Mobile Termination Rates and Firms' Profits

2015

The theoretical literature on mobile termination rates (MTRs) is inconclusive on how the level of MTRs affects overall consumer charges and firms' profits. We show that when firms offer bundles with fixed included usage – a tariff structure that has become more common in recent years – an identical change in all MTRs does not affect firms' retail prices or profits. We use a panel dataset from saturated European markets to estimate the effect of MTRs on mobile operators' profits. As predicted by the theoretical model, we cannot reject the fact that firms' profits are unaffected by an identical change in all MTRs.

Competition (economics)MicroeconomicsEconomics and Econometrics0502 economics and business05 social sciencesEconomicsTariffMonetary economics050207 economicsEmpirical evidence050205 econometrics The Scandinavian Journal of Economics
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