
Microsoft Word
... of the recent Subprime Mortgage Crisis and the associated and protracted credit crunch of the last couple of years. Minsky argued that long periods of economic stability encourage investors (including financial institutions) to take on more risk. As a result they tend to borrow too much and pay too ...
... of the recent Subprime Mortgage Crisis and the associated and protracted credit crunch of the last couple of years. Minsky argued that long periods of economic stability encourage investors (including financial institutions) to take on more risk. As a result they tend to borrow too much and pay too ...
research paper series Research Paper 2014/04
... institutions to mitigate the effects of market frictions (such as informational asymmetries between lenders and borrowers, poor quality corporate governance and intermediation costs), on the ability of its entrepreneurs to borrow.2 There is empirical support for the assertion that financial constrai ...
... institutions to mitigate the effects of market frictions (such as informational asymmetries between lenders and borrowers, poor quality corporate governance and intermediation costs), on the ability of its entrepreneurs to borrow.2 There is empirical support for the assertion that financial constrai ...
interfaces between economic and marketing approach to advertising
... uncertainty. The greater the uncertainty (we move in the spectrum from search to experience goods) the larger is the propensity to gain relevant information (also by means of advertising), hence a potential loss is significant (Guseman, 1981; Murray, 1991). Information evaluation depends on how it i ...
... uncertainty. The greater the uncertainty (we move in the spectrum from search to experience goods) the larger is the propensity to gain relevant information (also by means of advertising), hence a potential loss is significant (Guseman, 1981; Murray, 1991). Information evaluation depends on how it i ...
The Marginal Use Value
... The Paradox of Value : Water-Diamond Paradox The water-diamond paradox refers to a paradox between the value of water versus that of diamond ; and the price of water versus that of diamond. Some people argued that water is so useful, yet its price is relatively lower than most goods. Whereas diamond ...
... The Paradox of Value : Water-Diamond Paradox The water-diamond paradox refers to a paradox between the value of water versus that of diamond ; and the price of water versus that of diamond. Some people argued that water is so useful, yet its price is relatively lower than most goods. Whereas diamond ...
Miller2008-ProductionFunctions.pdf
... conditions is met. Since these conditions aren’t satisfied in real economies, it is likely that the good fit observed in empirical studies of aggregate production functions is the result of a statistical artifact. Aggregate production functions rely heavily on the use of marginal products and facto ...
... conditions is met. Since these conditions aren’t satisfied in real economies, it is likely that the good fit observed in empirical studies of aggregate production functions is the result of a statistical artifact. Aggregate production functions rely heavily on the use of marginal products and facto ...
Equity, Sustainable Development and Environmental Economics
... more than offset by environmental deterioration. Most people would acknowledge a moral obligation to future generations, particularly as people who are not yet born can have no say in decisions taken today that may affect them. There are two different ways of looking at the need to ensure that futur ...
... more than offset by environmental deterioration. Most people would acknowledge a moral obligation to future generations, particularly as people who are not yet born can have no say in decisions taken today that may affect them. There are two different ways of looking at the need to ensure that futur ...
PDF
... costs. New investment must be transformed to capital stock, but this transformation requires resources in the short run. Therefore, capital investment has the opposite influence on the function F(') as does the level of capital, K.3 If there were one output and the equation were explicitly solved fo ...
... costs. New investment must be transformed to capital stock, but this transformation requires resources in the short run. Therefore, capital investment has the opposite influence on the function F(') as does the level of capital, K.3 If there were one output and the equation were explicitly solved fo ...
PDF
... where the base technology has capital-skill complementarity on the one hand and capital-skill substitution on the other. When skill and capital are represented as substitutes, the implied technical change is skill-enhancement. Although the empirical evidence tends to support the model with capital-s ...
... where the base technology has capital-skill complementarity on the one hand and capital-skill substitution on the other. When skill and capital are represented as substitutes, the implied technical change is skill-enhancement. Although the empirical evidence tends to support the model with capital-s ...
E L conomic Statistics in ao PDR
... ▪ Contact points publicized for each statistical subject area ▪ User consultations are organized by producers of economic statistics ▪ Awareness of relevance, among users, of official statistics to economic policy making is not considered sufficient but there are activities in place to improve upon ...
... ▪ Contact points publicized for each statistical subject area ▪ User consultations are organized by producers of economic statistics ▪ Awareness of relevance, among users, of official statistics to economic policy making is not considered sufficient but there are activities in place to improve upon ...
Macroeconomics 1 Ch VII. Investment and Growth Theories Chapter
... firm over its replacement cost: The market price incorporates the market’s expectations as to the prospect of future business returns to the firm, while the replacement cost is simply the present market price of capital required to set up the firm. The market value can be easily approximated by the ...
... firm over its replacement cost: The market price incorporates the market’s expectations as to the prospect of future business returns to the firm, while the replacement cost is simply the present market price of capital required to set up the firm. The market value can be easily approximated by the ...
Economic Foundations for Entertainment, Media, and Technology
... Yes: Conscious decision to take higher income in the form of more leisure! ...
... Yes: Conscious decision to take higher income in the form of more leisure! ...
2014 Working paper on Cross
... As indicated in Figure 1, entrepreneurship is one subset of economic activity that is a consequence of free markets, a connection that has also been explored in recent research. Looking at just domestic U.S. data, Kraft and Sobel (2005) find that sole proprietorship growth rates are positively predi ...
... As indicated in Figure 1, entrepreneurship is one subset of economic activity that is a consequence of free markets, a connection that has also been explored in recent research. Looking at just domestic U.S. data, Kraft and Sobel (2005) find that sole proprietorship growth rates are positively predi ...
III A Paucity of Firm-Specific Information in Emerging Stock Markets
... coordination of the economic actions of huge numbers of people. Hayek concluded that such a massive information processing and coordination exercise is beyond the ability of even the most skilled planners using the most pervasive state surveillance and control apparatus. Such an effort, he argued, i ...
... coordination of the economic actions of huge numbers of people. Hayek concluded that such a massive information processing and coordination exercise is beyond the ability of even the most skilled planners using the most pervasive state surveillance and control apparatus. Such an effort, he argued, i ...
Investment Chapter: Application on Kuwait.
... The demand : Dependent on several factors such as household incomes and the cost of mortgages. ...
... The demand : Dependent on several factors such as household incomes and the cost of mortgages. ...
Competitive Equilibrium
... consequence, new firms and new capital will be attracted to the industry. If economic profits are negative, then stockholders receive less than they had expected and to the extent possible capital will move out of the industry. ...
... consequence, new firms and new capital will be attracted to the industry. If economic profits are negative, then stockholders receive less than they had expected and to the extent possible capital will move out of the industry. ...
Economic Growth Controlling Capital : focusing on the 1960s
... relationship, and the discipline that states maintained over businesses. These mitigated information problems and limited rent-seeking (Weiss, 1998). Although not often considered, external threats and international geopolitics played an important role (Vartiainen, 1995). On this basis, the region d ...
... relationship, and the discipline that states maintained over businesses. These mitigated information problems and limited rent-seeking (Weiss, 1998). Although not often considered, external threats and international geopolitics played an important role (Vartiainen, 1995). On this basis, the region d ...
GOVERNMENT PURCHASES AND N. Gregory Mankiw
... and consumer capital behave very differently in response to fiscal policy. Increases in government purchases crowd out capital as a whole, W, but temporarily crowd in producer capital at the expense of consumer capital. The result that an increase in government purchases reduces real ...
... and consumer capital behave very differently in response to fiscal policy. Increases in government purchases crowd out capital as a whole, W, but temporarily crowd in producer capital at the expense of consumer capital. The result that an increase in government purchases reduces real ...
CFA Dinner
... Euroland - will have a very major bearing on Global, GCC and Emerging Markets in general. W/V or U – US has its own severe economic issues, which have some way to resolve, including a new banking ‘battle’ – are we back to Glass Steagel? – China tightening interest rates – If the Chinese economy slow ...
... Euroland - will have a very major bearing on Global, GCC and Emerging Markets in general. W/V or U – US has its own severe economic issues, which have some way to resolve, including a new banking ‘battle’ – are we back to Glass Steagel? – China tightening interest rates – If the Chinese economy slow ...
indifference_curve_approach
... • Income Effect = Increase in real income due to a fall in the price of the commodity • Substitution Effect = tendency to substitute cheaper goods for the more expensive one • Income effect causes a movement along the ICC which has a positive slope • Substitution effect causes a movement along the P ...
... • Income Effect = Increase in real income due to a fall in the price of the commodity • Substitution Effect = tendency to substitute cheaper goods for the more expensive one • Income effect causes a movement along the ICC which has a positive slope • Substitution effect causes a movement along the P ...
Application of Complexity Theory in Industrial Cluster Evolution
... material source around the cluster, as well as enough information can be exchanged to each other, and perfect infrastructure improve productivity; Secondly, the competitive effects within the cluster can improve the enterprise incentive and performance assessment; Again, competition within the clust ...
... material source around the cluster, as well as enough information can be exchanged to each other, and perfect infrastructure improve productivity; Secondly, the competitive effects within the cluster can improve the enterprise incentive and performance assessment; Again, competition within the clust ...
Chapter 12
... – A natural monopoly results from a situation in which one firm can supply the entire market at a lower price than two or more firms can. – Example: Electric utility – A market used to be thought as a natural monopoly may turn out to be no longer the case as technology progresses ...
... – A natural monopoly results from a situation in which one firm can supply the entire market at a lower price than two or more firms can. – Example: Electric utility – A market used to be thought as a natural monopoly may turn out to be no longer the case as technology progresses ...
Ch.9
... Barriers to Entry • Network Externalities –The added benefits for all users of a good or service that arise because other people are using it too –Joining a large network is more beneficial than joining a small network ...
... Barriers to Entry • Network Externalities –The added benefits for all users of a good or service that arise because other people are using it too –Joining a large network is more beneficial than joining a small network ...