Search results for "ta511"

showing 10 items of 82 documents

Desertions in nineteenth-century shipping: modelling quit behaviour

2013

Ship jumping in foreign ports was widespread throughout the age of sail. Desertion by seamen was illegal, it occurred abroad, and men who deserted only seldom returned home. We analyse desertion quantitatively and link it to the broader question of quit behaviour and labour turnover. Though the better wages paid at the foreign ports were the main reason for desertion, the regression model of the determinants of desertion indicates that outside opportunities, such as migration, and monetary incentives played a significant role in the nineteenth-century labour market, characterized by rather strict control over labour supply, working conditions, and terms of trade. Copyright , Oxford Universi…

HistoryLabour economicsta511IncentiveLabour supplyDesertionEconomics Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)Control (management)Economicsta615Terms of tradeReturned homeEuropean Review of Economic History
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The anatomy and causal structure of a corporate myth: Nokia by the book

2014

In this paper we conceptualise explanations of company-specific commercial performance as corporate myths. To improve our understanding of anatomy and causal structure of corporate myths, we analyse publications that deal with Nokia’s historical transformation from a lossmaking 1980s conglomerate to a focused and successful telecommunications company in the early 1990s. From a corpus of related literature, 89 causal arguments are identified and analysed in terms of the logic of the arguments employed. The analysis shows that (1) most existing analyses offer either a specific or a biased explanation for Nokia’s success; (2) very few explanations are either plausible or logical; (3) it is mos…

Historymobile telephonyta511narratiivitStrategy and ManagementInterpretation (philosophy)puhelimetMythologyAnatomyCausal structurehistoriaCausalityNokianarrativesta615NarrativeSociologyBusiness and International Management
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Regional Input–Output Tables and the FLQ Formula: A Case Study of Finland

2013

Flegg A. T. and Tohmo T. Regional input – output tables and the FLQ formula: a case study of Finland, Regional Studies. This paper examines the use of location quotients (LQs) in constructing regional input – output tables. Its focus is on the modified FLQ formula proposed by Flegg and Webber in 1997. Using data for twenty Finnish regions of widely different size, a regression model is developed to assist in the selection of a value for the unknown parameter δ in this formula. It is found that the FLQ yields results far superior to those from standard LQ-based formulae. The FLQ-based initial set of regional input coefficients could be used to build the non-survey foundations of a hybrid mod…

Input/outputta511EconometricsGeneral Social SciencesSocial Sciences & Humanities[SHS.SCIPO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Political scienceGeneral Environmental ScienceMathematicsRegional Studies
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"A Comment on Tobias Kronenberg's "Construction of Regional Input-Output Tables Using Nonsurvey Methods: The Role of Cross-Hauling"

2012

This article examines the effectiveness of a new non-survey regionalization method: Kronenberg’s Cross-Hauling Adjusted Regionalization Method (CHARM). This aims to take into account the fact that regions typically both import and export most commodities. Data for Uusimaa, Finland’s largest region, are employed to carry out a detailed empirical test of CHARM. This test gives very encouraging results. CHARM is suitable for studying environmental questions, but it can only be applied in situations where foreign imports have been included in the national input–output table. Where the focus is on regional output and employment, location quotients (LQs) can be used for purposes of regionalizati…

Input/outputta511Operations researchGeneral Social SciencesTest (assessment)Empirical researchCarry (investment)Regional scienceEconomicsmedia_common.cataloged_instanceTable (database)National levelCharm (quantum number)European unionGeneral Environmental Sciencemedia_commonInternational Regional Science Review
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On the Returns to Invention within Firms: Evidence from Finland

2018

International audience; In this paper we merge individual income data, firm-level data, patenting data, and IQ data in Finland over the period 1988–2012 to analyze the returns to invention for inventors and their coworkers or stakeholders within the same firm. We find that: (i) inventors collect only 8 percent of the total private return from invention; (ii) entrepreneurs get over 44 percent of the total gains; (iii) bluecollar workers get about 26 percent of the gains and the rest goes to white-collar workers. Moreover, entrepreneurs start with significant negative returns prior to the patent application, but their returns subsequently become highly positive.

JEL: O - Economic Development Innovation Technological Change and Growth/O.O3 - Innovation • Research and Development • Technological Change • Intellectual Property Rights/O.O3.O34 - Intellectual Property and Intellectual CapitalINNOVATIONPatent applicationvoitotJEL: L - Industrial Organization/L.L2 - Firm Objectives Organization and Behavior/L.L2.L25 - Firm Performance: Size Diversification and Scope0502 economics and business050602 political science & public administrationdistribution of profits050207 economicsJEL: D - Microeconomics/D.D2 - Production and Organizationsta511keksinnötinventions05 social sciencesprofitsvoitot (talous)General MedicineIndividual incomeJEL: G - Financial Economics/G.G3 - Corporate Finance and Governance/G.G3.G32 - Financing Policy • Financial Risk and Risk Management • Capital and Ownership Structure • Value of Firms • Goodwill[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Financeyritykset0506 political science8. Economic growthJEL: L - Industrial Organization/L.L2 - Firm Objectives Organization and Behavior/L.L2.L26 - EntrepreneurshipDemographic economicsBusinessJEL: O - Economic Development Innovation Technological Change and Growth/O.O3 - Innovation • Research and Development • Technological Change • Intellectual Property Rights/O.O3.O31 - Innovation and Invention: Processes and IncentivesenterprisesMerge (version control)voitonjako
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Public Employees as Politicians: Evidence from Close Elections

2017

We analyze the effect of municipal employees’ political representation in municipal councils on local public spending. We use within-party, as-good-as-random variation in close elections in the Finnish open-list proportional election system to quantify the effect. One more councilor employed by the public sector increases spending by about 1%. The effect comes largely through the largest party and is specific to the employment sector of the municipal employee. The results are consistent with public employees having an information advantage over other politicians, and thus, being able to influence policy.

Labour economicsSociology and Political Sciencepublic financesEmployment sectorPublic administrationRepresentation (politics)Public spendingPoliticskunnanvaltuustotpolitiikka0502 economics and business050602 political science & public administrationEconomicsta517050207 economicskunnan työntekijätta511julkinen talousjulkiset menotbusiness.industrypublic sector05 social sciencesPublic sectorpublic expendituresJA Political science (General)julkinen sektorimunicipal employees0506 political sciencePolitical Science and International Relationsmunicipal councilspoliticsbusinessAmerican Political Science Review
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The Nordic expericence revisited: labour market booms and slumps since the 1990s in Finland and Sweden

2011

PurposeThis paper aims to provide an account of the unemployment performance of two Nordic countries during their recent labour market booms and slumps.Design/methodology/approachBased on the empirical models of Karanassou et al., we conduct dynamic simulation exercises and explore the determinants of unemployment.FindingsThe analysis yields two main findings. First, the capital stock was the most important determinant of the unemployment trajectory in both countries. This result appears in all periods considered: in the slump of the early 1990s and the boom of the late 1990s, as well as in the stabilisation period of the early 2000s. Second, the role of the foreign sector on the unemployme…

Labour economicsTyömarkkinatunemploymentta511media_common.quotation_subjecttyöttömyysBoomlabour marketCapital stockCapital (economics)UnemploymentValue (economics)EconomicsGeneral Economics Econometrics and Financemedia_common
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Genetic endowments, parental resources and adult health: Evidence from the Young Finns Study

2017

This paper uses longitudinal survey data linked to administrative registers to examine socioeconomic gradients in health, particularly whether the effects of genetic endowments interact with the socioeconomic resources of the parental household. We find that genetic risk scores contribute to adult health measured by biomarkers. This result is consistent with the findings from genome-wide association studies. Socioeconomic gradients in health differ based on biomarker and resource measures. Family education is negatively related to obesity and the waist-hip ratio, and family income is negatively related to low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and triglyceride levels. Parental resources do not…

MaleGerontologyHealth (social science)Social Determinants of HealthHealth StatusbiomarkkeritGenome-wide association studyBody Mass Index0302 clinical medicineSurveys and QuestionnairesLongitudinal Studies030212 general & internal medicine050207 economicsFinlandgenetic risk scores05 social sciencesta3142riskitekijätIncomeFemaleSportsAdultparental resourcesgenetiikkaResource (biology)Kansanterveystiede ympäristö ja työterveys - Public health care science environmental and occupational healthympäristötekijätFamily income03 medical and health sciencesHistory and Philosophy of Science0502 economics and businessFood QualitymedicineHumansSocioeconomic statussosioekonomiset tekijätTriglyceridesAdult healthGenetic associationta511business.industryta1184Cholesterol HDLadult healthbiomarkersCholesterol LDLmedicine.diseaseObesityperhetaustaSocioeconomic Factorsmarkkeritgenome-wide association studiesSurvey data collectionterveyserotbusinessGenome-Wide Association StudyDemographySocial Science & Medicine
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If you drink, don't smoke : Joint associations between risky health behaviors and labor market outcomes

2018

This paper examines the links between risky health behaviors and labor market success. We provide new evidence on the joint relationships between the most prominent forms of risky health behavior - alcohol consumption, smoking and physical inactivity - and long-term labor market outcomes. We use twin data for Finnish men and women linked to register-based individual information on earnings and labor market attachment. The twin data allow us to account for shared family and environmental factors and to measure risky health behaviors in 1975 and 1981. The long-term labor market outcomes were measured in adulthood as an average over the period 1990-2009. The sample sizes are 2156 and 2498 twin…

MaletulotHealth (social science)Heavy drinkerALCOHOL-CONSUMPTIONrisky health behaviorsTwinsphysical activityADULTHOODCohort StudiesHealth Risk Behaviors0302 clinical medicine5. Gender equalityDEPENDENCEEarly adulthood030212 general & internal medicineRegistries050207 economicsFINNISH TWIN COHORTFinlandansiotaso05 social sciencesta31423142 Public health care science environmental and occupational healthGENETIC VULNERABILITYADOLESCENCEIncomeFemalealkoholinkäyttöPsychologyearningsfyysinen aktiivisuusEARNINGSAdultEmploymentAlcohol Drinkingalcohol consumptionDisease clustersmoking03 medical and health sciencesHistory and Philosophy of ScienceCigarette smokingtupakointi0502 economics and businessHumansPSYSICAL ACTIVITYConsumption (economics)ta511EarningsGenetic vulnerabilityMORTALITYtyöllistyminentyöllisyysIndividual levelALCOHOL COMSUMPTIONPHYSICAL-ACTIVITYterveyskäyttäytyminenDemographic economicsCIGARETTE-SMOKINGSedentary BehaviorterveysriskitSocial Science and Medicine
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The Creative Class Revisited: Does the Creative Class Affect the Birth Rate of High-tech Firms in Nordic Countries?

2015

In the new knowledge-based economy, the ability of both firms and regions to adapt to the changes in their external environment and to remain competitive is closely related to their capacity to innovate and continuously renew the existing structures and knowledge bases. With respect to this, dense concentrations of knowledge-intensive industries and related activities are usually considered to be propitious environments from which new innovations can emerge. In such environments, the ability to attract talented, highly skilled labor is crucial for the success of regions. Employees who possess and provide know-how and creativity play a leading role in knowledge-intensive production and inno…

Nordic sub-regionsta511media_common.quotation_subjectContext (language use)CreativityAffect (psychology)Creative classHigh techCreative class Nordic sub-regions new high-tech firmsBirth rateEmpirical researchcreative classProduction (economics)new high-tech firmsBusinessMarketingta512ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSmedia_commonJournal of Enterprising Culture
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