Search results for "microeconomics"

showing 10 items of 442 documents

Coordinated energy management using agents in neighborhood areas with RES and storage

2016

This study proposes a novel coordination mechanism for smart homes in a small-scale neighborhood. This mechanism deploys a price and incentive-based energy management algorithm that considers renewable energy sources and battery storage. The objective of the proposed coordination algorithm is to decrease the electricity bills of the smart homes by increasing renewable energy usage inside the neighborhood, and enabling electricity trading among smart homes. The neighborhood is modeled using multi-agent systems, and heuristic problem solving is used by deploying a genetic optimization and rolling-horizon technique for day-ahead scheduling of the electricity appliances. Simulation results show…

EngineeringEnergy managementTotal costbusiness.industry020209 energy02 engineering and technologyEnvironmental economicsScheduling (computing)Renewable energyMicroeconomicsRenewable energy creditIncentiveHome automation0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringElectricitybusiness2016 IEEE International Energy Conference (ENERGYCON)
researchProduct

Die Wirkung funktionaler, emotionaler und relationaler Nutzendimensionen auf die Markenloyalität

2005

Drawing on existing marketing literature three dimensions of utility are suggested: functional, emotional and relational. It is argued that the importance of these dimensions vary over time. In the early phase of the product life cycle, the functional utility is crucial for the success in the market place. Over time the emotional and relational dimension become more and more important. An empircial study carried out in the telecom industry provides evidence that this shift of importance actually takes place. The managerial implication is twofold. Firstly, the value proposition needs to be adapted in order to meet customer expectations. Secondly, an organizational change is necessary to be a…

EngineeringOperations researchbusiness.industryValue proposition05 social sciencesGeneral Business Management and AccountingMicroeconomicsProduct lifecycleOrder (exchange)Management of Technology and InnovationOrganizational change0502 economics and businessProduction (economics)050211 marketingMarket placeDimension (data warehouse)businessEarly phaseGeneral Economics Econometrics and Finance050203 business & managementSchmalenbachs Zeitschrift für betriebswirtschaftliche Forschung
researchProduct

ENDOGENOUS TIMING WITH FREE ENTRY

2006

A free entry model with linear costs is considered where firms first choose their entry time and then compete in the market according to the resulting timing decisions. Multiple equilibria arise allowing for infinitely many industry output configurations encompassing one limit-output dominant firm and the Cournot equilibrium with free entry as extreme cases. Sequential entry is never observed. Both Stackelberg and Cournot-like outcomes are sustainable as equilibria however. When the number of incumbents is given, entry is always prevented, and industry output is sometimes larger than the entry preventing level.

Entry preventionEntry timeCournot competitionSettore SECS-P/06 - Economia ApplicataMarket leadershipjel:L11Microeconomicsfree entry market leadership entry preventionFree entryjel:L13EconomicsStackelberg competitionmedicineFree entrymedicine.symptomEndogenous Timing Entry PreemptionIndustrial organization
researchProduct

The paradox of (Inter)net neutrality: An experiment on ex-ante antitrust regulation✰

2022

Abstract Net neutrality has been the most relevant and heavily debated Internet regulation policy of the last decade. Net neutrality aims to prohibit discrimination between data packages in terms of content, origin, destination, or type of equipment used. However, the Big Tech companies, sheltered by the net neutrality policy, have flourished. They now have the power to exclude minor companies, and therefore their contents, from the Internet market in de facto defiance of the net neutrality principle. Academic results regarding this net neutrality paradox are still ambiguous. To represent the current Internet market distortions and analyze a potential tool to adjust and strengthen the net n…

Ex-antebusiness.industryControl (management)UNESCO::CIENCIAS ECONÓMICAScollusion:CIENCIAS ECONÓMICAS [UNESCO]Net neutralityPower (social and political)Microeconomicsbig technet neutralityMarket structureDictator gameManagement of Technology and InnovationEconomicsThe InternetNeutralityBusiness and International Managementbusinessexperimental economicsinternet regulationApplied PsychologyTechnological Forecasting and Social Change
researchProduct

Entropy-Based Behavioural Efficiency of the Financial Market

2021

The most known and used abstract model of the financial market is based on the concept of the informational efficiency (EMH) of that market. The paper proposes an alternative which could be named the behavioural efficiency of the financial market, which is based on the behavioural entropy instead of the informational entropy. More specifically, the paper supports the idea that, in the financial market, the only measure (if any) of the entropy is the available behaviours indicated by the implicit information. Therefore, the behavioural entropy is linked to the concept of behavioural efficiency. The paper argues that, in fact, in the financial markets, there is not a (real) informational effi…

Existential quantificationSciencePhysicsQC1-999Financial marketQEconomic agentsGeneral Physics and AstronomyAstrophysicsMeasure (mathematics)Articlebehaviourimplicit informationMicroeconomicsQB460-466EMHefficiencyEconomicsAMHfinancial marketEntropy (energy dispersal)EBBEentropyEntropy
researchProduct

Decisions, externalitats i economia pública en un context de localització

2009

In this paper, we propose a learning application of the theory of market failure as part of a degree in Economics. They are new contexts in which adapt existing knowledge. Even a small contribution from our clasrrom experience, we can say that one side is extremely motivating for students and the other opens a new methodological framework in which student participation in learning becomes crucial.

ExternalitiesUNESCO::CIENCIAS ECONÓMICASlcsh:Llcsh:L7-991:CIENCIAS ECONÓMICAS [UNESCO]experimental economicsExternalities; microeconomics; experimental economicsmicroeconomicslcsh:Education (General)lcsh:Education@tic: Revista d'Innovació Educativa
researchProduct

Futures pricing in electricity markets based on stable CARMA spot models

2012

We present a new model for the electricity spot price dynamics, which is able to capture seasonality, low-frequency dynamics and the extreme spikes in the market. Instead of the usual purely deterministic trend we introduce a non-stationary independent increments process for the low-frequency dynamics, and model the large uctuations by a non-Gaussian stable CARMA process. The model allows for analytic futures prices, and we apply these to model and estimate the whole market consistently. Besides standard parameter estimation, an estimation procedure is suggested, where we t the non-stationary trend using futures data with long time until delivery, and a robust L 1 -lter to nd the states of …

FOS: Computer and information sciencesEconomics and EconometricsElectricity spot pricebusiness.industryEstimation theoryRisk premium60G52 62M10 91B84 (Primary) 60G10 60G51 91B70 (Secondary)Lévy processStatistics - ApplicationsCARMA model electricity spot prices electricity forward prices continuous time linear model Lévy process stable CARMA process risk premium robust filterddc:MicroeconomicsFOS: Economics and businessGeneral EnergyBase load power plantPeak loadEconometricsEconomicsApplications (stat.AP)ElectricityPricing of Securities (q-fin.PR)businessFutures contractQuantitative Finance - Pricing of Securities
researchProduct

The network of global corporate control.

2011

The structure of the control network of transnational corporations affects global market competition and financial stability. So far, only small national samples were studied and there was no appropriate methodology to assess control globally. We present the first investigation of the architecture of the international ownership network, along with the computation of the control held by each global player. We find that transnational corporations form a giant bow-tie structure and that a large portion of control flows to a small tightly-knit core of financial institutions. This core can be seen as an economic “super-entity” that raises new important issues both for researchers and policy make…

FOS: Computer and information sciencesInternationalityFinancial ManagementEconomicsFinancial intermediarylcsh:MedicineNetwork theorySocial and Behavioral Sciences01 natural sciences010305 fluids & plasmasMicroeconomics050207 economicslcsh:ScienceMutual fundIndustrial organizationProfessional CorporationsMultidisciplinaryCorporate governanceApplied MathematicsPhysics05 social sciencesCommerceComputer Science - Social and Information NetworksComplex SystemsSocial Control PoliciesCore (game theory)Interdisciplinary PhysicsGeneral Finance (q-fin.GN)Quantitative Finance - General FinanceResearch ArticlePhysics - Physics and SocietyControl (management)FOS: Physical sciencesSpatial Economic AnalysisPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)BiologyStatistical MechanicsFOS: Economics and businessFinancial management0502 economics and business0103 physical sciencesownership corporate control network theoryStructure of MarketsSocial and Information Networks (cs.SI)business.industryFinancial marketlcsh:RIndustrial Organizationlcsh:QbusinessMathematicsPloS one
researchProduct

How markets slowly digest changes in supply and demand

2008

In this article we revisit the classic problem of tatonnement in price formation from a microstructure point of view, reviewing a recent body of theoretical and empirical work explaining how fluctuations in supply and demand are slowly incorporated into prices. Because revealed market liquidity is extremely low, large orders to buy or sell can only be traded incrementally, over periods of time as long as months. As a result order flow is a highly persistent long-memory process. Maintaining compatibility with market efficiency has profound consequences on price formation, on the dynamics of liquidity, and on the nature of impact. We review a body of theory that makes detailed quantitative pr…

Factor marketPhysics - Physics and Society050208 financeMarket rateQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureStatistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Market clearing05 social sciencesFinancial marketFOS: Physical sciencesMarket microstructurePhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Supply and demandMarket liquidityTrading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)MicroeconomicsFOS: Economics and businessFinancial Markets Econophysics Microstructure Stochastic processes0502 economics and businessEconomics050207 economicsMarket impactCondensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics
researchProduct

Pecking Order Versus Trade-off: An Empirical Approach to the Small and Medium Enterprise Capital Structure

2003

In this paper, we explore two of the most relevant theories that explain financial policy in small and medium enterprises (SMEs): pecking order theory and trade-off theory. Panel data methodology is used to test the empirical hypotheses over a sample of 6482 Spanish SMEs during the five-year period 1994?1998. The results suggest that both theoretical approaches contribute to explain capital structure in SMEs. However, while we find evidence that SMEs attempt to achieve a target or optimum leverage (trade-off model), there is less support for the view that SMEs adjust their leverage level to their financing requirements (pecking order model). En este trabajo, exploramos dos de las teorías má…

FinanceCapital structurebusiness.industryPecking orderjel:C34Sample (statistics)Trade-offjel:G32jel:G33MicroeconomicsLeverage (negotiation)Pecking order theoryEconomicsSmall and medium-sized enterprisesbusinessselección jerárquica equilibrio estático estructura de capital pymes datos de panel. Pecking Order Trade-off Capital Structure Small and Medium Enterprises Panel Data.Panel dataSSRN Electronic Journal
researchProduct