Search results for "evidence."

showing 10 items of 1017 documents

Unemployment, taxation and public expenditure in OECD economies

2008

Abstract This paper considers the financing of productive public goods and social benefits through different types of taxes in a model with unemployment. We incorporate unemployment, caused by the wage-setting behaviour of a monopolistic union, in a neoclassical growth model which integrates a quite detailed structure of taxes used to finance productive public expenditures and social transfers and parameterizes the inefficiency of government to transform taxes into public goods or transfers. The main conclusion is that the relationship between unemployment and labour taxes critically depends on the degree of government efficiency and the unions' perception on how taxes determine the welfare…

Economics and EconometricsLabour economicsTax deferralmedia_common.quotation_subjectPublic expenditureWelfare statePublic goodMonopolistic competitionPolitical Science and International RelationsUnemploymentEconomicsInefficiencyEmpirical evidencemedia_commonEuropean Journal of Political Economy
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Same work, lower grade? Student ethnicity and teachers’ subjective assessments

2010

Previous research shows that ethnic minority students perform poorer in school when they are taught by ethnic majority teachers. Why this is the case was unclear. This paper focuses on one important potential explanation: I examine whether ethnic majority teachers grade minority and majority students differently for the same work. Using an experiment, I rule out the existence of such a direct grading bias. I do find indirect evidence for alternative explanations: teachers report lower expectations and unfavorable attitudes that both likely affect their behavior towards minority students, potentially inducing them to perform below their ability level. Effects of having majority teachers on m…

Economics and EconometricsLower gradeeducationEthnic groupEthnic majorityAffect (psychology)EducationIndirect evidenceDevelopmental psychologyjel:I2Work (electrical)Ethnicity Discrimination Grading ExperimentSDG 1 - No Povertymental disordersjel:J15Mathematics educationGrading (education)Psychology/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/no_povertyEconomics of Education Review
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Cross-listing, price discovery and the informativeness of the trading process

2003

This paper analyzes the price discovery process of securities that trade at multiple markets with trading sessions that totally or partially overlap. Building on Hasbrouck (1995) information share approach, we introduce a methodology that distinguishes two sources of information asymmetries between markets: trade-related and trade-unrelated informative shocks. This approach determines how much of each market?s relative contribution to the price discovery process during the overlapping period is attributable to its own trading activity. We provide empirical evidence on the contribution of the NYSE in the price discovery process of the Spanish cross-listed stocks during the daily two-hour ove…

Economics and EconometricsNegociación en varios mercados Formación del precio Shocks de negociación ADRs Cross-listing price discovery trade shocks ADRs.Information asymmetryCross listingFinancial economicsProcess (engineering)EconomicsEconometricsBusinessEmpirical evidencePrice discoveryFinance
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The determinants of net interest income in the Mexican banking system: An integrated model

2009

This paper analyzes net interest income in the Mexican banking system over the period 1993-2005. Taking as reference the seminal work by Ho and Saunders (1981) and subsequent extensions by other authors, our study models the net interest margin simultaneously including operating costs and diversification and specialization as determinants of the margin. The results referring to the Mexican case show that its high margins can be explained mainly by average operating costs and by market power. Although non-interest income has increased in recent years, its economic impact is low. El trabajo analiza el margen de intermediación de la banca Mexicana en el periodo 1996-2005. Tomando como referenc…

Economics and EconometricsNet interest marginDiversification (finance)Monetary economicsjel:G21Net interest incomejel:L10EconomicsEconomic impact analysisMarket powerEmpirical evidenceBanca Margen financiero Costes operativos Poder de Mercado Ingresos no financieros. banking net interest income operating cost non-interest incomeFinanceOperating costJournal of Banking & Finance
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Does Environmental Uncertainty Affect Entrepreneurs’ Orientation and Performance? Empirical Evidence from Indonesian SMEs

2012

Small and medium enterprises (SMEs) have a critical role in economic growth in Indonesia and become the backbone for job creation, poverty alleviation, and safeguard during the crisis. However, they are highly exposed to uncertain environments. The present study aimed to investigate the influence of SMEs’ entrepreneurial orientation on business performance when uncertain environments exist. A total of 152 Indonesian SMEs were studied in order to assess this relationship. Moderated regression analysis is performed as the main statistical procedures to analyse the moderating role of environmental uncertainty on the influence of entrepreneurial orientation on business performance. Surprisingly…

Economics and EconometricsPovertyEntrepreneurial orientationRegression analysislcsh:BusinessAffect (psychology)entrepreneurial orientationlanguage.human_languagebusiness performanceIndonesianOrder (exchange)languageenvironmental uncertaintySmall and medium-sized enterprisesBusinessBusiness and International ManagementMarketingEmpirical evidencelcsh:HF5001-6182Industrial organizationbusiness performance; entrepreneurial orientation; environmental uncertaintyGadjah Mada International Journal of Business
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Competitive Pressure and Innovation at the Firm Level

2015

This paper provides empirical evidence on the relationship between market competitive pressure and firms' innovation using panel data of Spanish manufacturing firms for 1990–2006. We depart from standard measures of competition, and construct variables capturing the fundamentals of competitive pressure (product substitutability, market size and entry costs) to test the theoretical predictions of Vives [2008, The Journal of Industrial Economics] for free entry. Our results line up favourably with these predictions. We obtain that greater product substitutability and higher costs of entry lead to more process innovation but less product innovation, whereas market enlargement spurs both produc…

Economics and EconometricsProduct innovationMarket sizeCompetitive pressureGeneral Business Management and AccountingCompetition (economics)MicroeconomicsAccountingmedicineEconomicsProduct (category theory)Free entrymedicine.symptomEmpirical evidenceIndustrial organizationPanel dataThe Journal of Industrial Economics
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Scope of Negative Integration: A Comparative Analysis of Post, Public Transport and Port Services

2014

There is extensive literature that explains how liberalization policy deepens and widens. In the literature of European integration such reform is commonly considered to be the result of a bias towards liberalization in the treaties, thereby giving the European Commission and the European Court of Justice wide-ranging leverage to enforce such reform. However, such approaches have been criticized for being de-politicized – for failing to understand the conflicts inherent in controversial policies. It is therefore of interest to explore the scope conditions of this constitutional bias assumption in areas where liberalization policy is disputed. This article analyzes the EU decision-making pro…

Economics and EconometricsScope (project management)Liberalizationbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectFoundation (evidence)International tradeGeneral Business Management and AccountingPort (computer networking)Leverage (negotiation)Public transportService (economics)Political Science and International RelationsEuropean integrationEconomicsBusiness and International Managementbusinessmedia_commonJCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies
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How consistent are perceptions of inequality?

2020

Abstract Despite recent empirical evidence on the importance of perceived inequality, its analysis is still underexplored. In this paper we study whether unobserved perceptions of inequality are reflected in observed individual opinions in a consistent fashion. Inconsistency is relevant to ealuate the level of agreement that individuals share with respect to different domains of inequality. Using the wave from the 2009 International Social Survey Program in the US, we show that inequality is a complicated concept prone to inconsistencies and propose a testing procedure to an empirical appraisal. We find that inconsistencies exist though they may not extend to all the domains of inequality. …

Economics and EconometricsSociology and Political ScienceInequalityRelation (database)media_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences050105 experimental psychologyGeneral Social SurveyPoliticsInequalityEquality of whatPerception0502 economics and businessPerceptions0501 psychology and cognitive sciences050207 economicsPositive economicsEqual political treatmentEmpirical evidenceSet (psychology)PsychologyApplied Psychologymedia_common
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What Geographical Concentration of Industries in the Tunisian Sahel? Empirical Evidence Using Distance‐Based Measures

2020

International audience; This paper examines the location patterns of manufacturing industries within the most developed regions of Tunisia, the Sahel. We use detailed micro-geographic data and the distance-based approach of Duranton and Overman. While the textile industry shows a high degree of geographical concentration, the high-tech industries are also among the most concentrated, meaning that the Tunisian Sahel gathers a specialised pool in these industries. We further analyse the location patterns of manufacturing sub-sectors: totally and partially exporting plants and domestic, mixed and foreign plants and show that totally exporting plants and foreign and mixed plants exhibit strong …

Economics and EconometricsTunisiabusiness.industry05 social sciencesGeography Planning and Development[SHS.GEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Geography[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Financegeographical concentrationGeographyManufacturingManufacturing industries0502 economics and businessEconomic geography050207 economicscontinuous measuresEmpirical evidencebusiness050205 econometrics Distance based
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Determinants of COVID-19 Vaccine Rollouts and Their Effects on Health Outcomes

2022

Background Vaccination against the coronavirus disease (SARS-CoV-2) is understood to be the key way out of the COVID-19 pandemic. Limited evidence exists on the determinants of vaccine rollouts and their health effects at the country level. Objective Examine the determinants of COVID-19 vaccine rollouts and their effects on health outcomes. Methods Ordinary least squares regressions with standard errors clustered at the country level for Cross-section and Panel daily data of vaccinations and various health outcomes (new COVID-19 cases, fatalities, intensive care unit (ICU) admissions) for an unbalanced sample of about 200 countries during the period 16 December 2020 to 20 June 2021. Results…

Economics and Econometricsand (iii) COVID-19 cases in neighboring countries can lead to an increase in a country's domestic caseload and hamper efforts in taming its own local outbreak. Conclusions: By providing an early broad overview of the quantitative empirical estimates of the determinants of vaccine rollouts and the effects of COVID-19 vaccines our paper can help policymakers make informed decisions about local and global distributions of vaccines as well as related policy tools such as containment measure.Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)business.industryHealth PolicyNational accountsOutbreakGeneral Medicine(ii) vaccine deployment significantly reduces new COVID-19 infections Intensive Care Unit (ICU) admissions and fatalities and is more effective when coupled with stringent containment measures or when a country is experiencing a large outbreakVaccination against the coronavirus disease (SARS-CoV-2) is understood to be the key way out of the COVID-19 pandemic. Limited evidence exists on the determinants of vaccine rollouts and their health effects at the country level. Objective: Examine the determinants of COVID-19 vaccine rollouts and their effects on health outcomes. Methods: Ordinary least squares regressions with standard errors clustered at the country level for Cross-section and Panel daily data of vaccinations and various health outcomes (new COVID-19 cases fatalities intensive care unit (ICU) admissions) for an unbalanced sample of about 200 countries during the period 16 December 2020 to 20 June 2021. Results: We find evidence that: (i) early vaccine procurement domestic production of vaccines the severity of the pandemic a country's health infrastructure and vaccine acceptance are significant determinants of the speed of vaccination rolloutHealth outcomesIntensive care unitlaw.inventionVaccinationProcurementlawEnvironmental healthPandemicGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesMedicinebusinessGeneral Environmental ScienceIMF Working Papers
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