Search results for "externalities"

showing 8 items of 18 documents

Do agglomeration economies are lower for polluting sectors?

2019

This article explore how the relation between productivity and local city-size can be mitigated by pollution. More specifically, we estimate agglomeration economies considering a new source of heterogeneity among industries: the degree of pollution. Due to pollution perception acting as a dispersion force, we expect net agglomeration economies to be lower for polluting firms. In fact, polluting firms may anticipate that households and other firms are reluctant to locate near sources of pollution. In this paper, we exploit spatial data on sectoral emissions for a large number of air pollutants. We define a continuous variable of pollution that varies across sectors and employment zones. Our …

[QFIN]Quantitative Finance [q-fin]Negative externalitiesPolluting sectorsAgglomeration economies[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance[QFIN] Quantitative Finance [q-fin]
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Agglomeration Externalities and the Productivity of Italian Firms

2015

Despite the richness of contributions on the effects of agglomeration on economic activity, the empirical evidence still falls short, especially at the microeconomic level, where they should matter the most. This paper adds to this literature by performing an empirical exploration of the role of Marshallian, Jacobian, and Porterian externalities for the productivity of Italian firms. In particular, a large dataset of small and medium enterprises is first employed to estimate firm-level total factor productivity (TFP). Then dynamic panel and instrumental variables estimation methods are used to assess the effects of agglomeration externalities. The findings seem to suggest that these effects…

agglomeration externalities firm-level productivity Italian firms
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Le développement des médias sociaux. Proposition d'un modèle de diffusion intégrant les externalités de réseau dans un cadre concurrentiel

2011

International audience; La fréquentation des médias sociaux est très concentrée. L’intérêt de ce type de sites résidant dans la richesse du contenu élaboré par les participants, ce phénomène peut être en partie expliqué par les externalités de réseau. Afin de démontrer cet effet dans un cadre concurrentiel, cette recherche propose un modèle de diffusion intégrant le principe de l’attachement préférentiel issu des recherches en réseaux complexes. Ce modèle est analysé au travers d’une simulation et appliqué à 51 médias sociaux dans trois secteurs différents. Les résultats montrent que l’ajout de l’effet d’attraction menée par la taille relative du réseau social explique mieux la diffusion qu…

attachement préférentielmodèle de diffusionpreferential attachmentGeneral Computer Scienceexternalité de réseau[SHS.GESTION]Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administrationdiffusion model[ SHS.GESTION ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administrationnetwork externalities[SHS.GESTION] Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administrationRecherche et Applications en Marketing (French Edition)
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An Economic Definition of the City

1998

International audience

coordination[ SHS.ECO ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economies and financesJEL: R - Urban Rural Regional Real Estate and Transportation Economics/R.R0 - GeneralJEL : B - History of Economic Thought Methodology and Heterodox Approaches/B.B4 - Economic Methodology/B.B4.B40 - GeneralJEL: B - History of Economic Thought Methodology and Heterodox Approaches/B.B4 - Economic Methodology/B.B4.B40 - GeneralCities[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Financespatial externalities[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSJEL : R - Urban Rural Regional Real Estate and Transportation Economics/R.R0 - General
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Self-enforcing international environmental agreements revisited

2004

In Barrett's (1994) paper on transboundary pollution abatement is shown that if the signatories of an international environmental agreement act in a Stackelberg fashion, then, depending on parameter values, a self-enforcing IEA can have any number of signatories between two and the grand coalition. Barrett obtains this result using numerical simulations and also ignoring the fact that emissions must be non-negative. Recent attempts to use analytical approaches and to explicitly recognize the non-negativity constraints have suggested that the number of signatories of a stable IEA may be very small. The way such papers have dealt with non-negativity constraints is to restrict parameter values…

international externalities self-enforcing environmental agreements Stackelberg equilibrium non-negative emissions constraintsEconomics and EconometricsPublic economicsjel:D62jel:C72Transboundary pollutionjel:F02Grand coalitionMicroeconomicsrestrictjel:Q20Key (cryptography)EconomicsStackelberg competitionOxford Economic Papers
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Reply: Externalities and citation practices

2016

Dr. Shiri raises some important questions on the results in our short report "Externalities and article citations: experience of a national public health journal (Gaceta Sanitaria)"[1]. We welcome any debate on the topic of citations research because little evidence is available on this topic and exchange between readers, authors, and editors contributes to enrich this discussion.

medicine.medical_specialty030505 public healthPublic economicsEpidemiologybusiness.industryPublic healthcomputer.software_genre03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineCitation practicesMedicina Preventiva y Salud PúblicaExternalitiesMedicine030212 general & internal medicineData miningPublic Health0305 other medical sciencebusinessCitationcomputerExternality
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GREEN LOGISTICS – A DIFFERENT AND SUSTAINABLE BUSINESS GROWTH MODEL

2014

Built on the concepts of green logistics and green supply chain management (GrSCM), this paper presents the relationship between logistical activities and its related environmental effects and costs. By greening their supply chain, companies can better use their assets, optimize resources- do more with less, improve and create sustainable technology, ensure continuity and strategic, long-term alliances. Business ethics and social responsibility are important components of organisational effectiveness. Most companies recognize that socially responsible activities improve their image among consumers, stakeholders, the financial community and other relevant publics. They have found that enviro…

resource crisis green logistics externalities green supply chain management Mars Inc.Studies in Business and Economics
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Impacts des réseaux viaires sur les mobilités urbaines : quelques illustrations

2008

This research aims to find the impact of the network shape and structure on the urban mobilities, in order to fight against the automobile dependency and to include the externalities in the network design. Three examples illustrate this objective. The first one shows the influence of the network shape on the pedestrian urban flows. The second one emphasizes how sensitive to the network structure is the efficiency of a very flexible Demand Responsive Transport. The third example demonstrates that the network metric is favourable to the automobile and how it can be possible to apply an alternative metric, called the “slow metric” to reduce the urban sprawling and the automobile dependency.

transport à la demandemobilitésmobilities[SHS.GEO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Geographyformemétrique lente[SHS.GEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Geographyshapesyntaxe spatialespatial syntax[ SHS.GEO ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Geographymetricsefficacitéefficiencyslow metricmétrique des réseauxpedestrian movementdéplacements pédestresexternalités des réseauxstructuredemand responsive transportnetwork externalities
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