IOSR Journal of Economics and Finance (IOSR-JEF)
... Abstract: This study was carried out to evaluate the economy during pre-reformed and reformed period in Nigeria.The study notes two eras of pre-reform (1970-1985) and the reformed (1995-2010) financial eras. Using both descriptive statistics and analytical methods, regression analyses were conducted ...
... Abstract: This study was carried out to evaluate the economy during pre-reformed and reformed period in Nigeria.The study notes two eras of pre-reform (1970-1985) and the reformed (1995-2010) financial eras. Using both descriptive statistics and analytical methods, regression analyses were conducted ...
Measuring the Italian Economy. 1300-1861
... separated by a relatively rapid increase from 1450 until about 1575 19 and then a decline. In the middle of the Seventeenth century, the population of Central-Northern Italy was 1.5 million lower than at the peak of the medieval rise. The modern growth of the population began around 1660-70. It was ...
... separated by a relatively rapid increase from 1450 until about 1575 19 and then a decline. In the middle of the Seventeenth century, the population of Central-Northern Italy was 1.5 million lower than at the peak of the medieval rise. The modern growth of the population began around 1660-70. It was ...
China as a Non-Market Economy - Institute for International Trade
... convertible for current account purposes. The ruble is also convertible for capital account purposes. As a result of its examination, the Import Administration found that, notwithstanding limited currency controls, the Russian ruble is convertible and that the currency’s exchange rate results from s ...
... convertible for current account purposes. The ruble is also convertible for capital account purposes. As a result of its examination, the Import Administration found that, notwithstanding limited currency controls, the Russian ruble is convertible and that the currency’s exchange rate results from s ...
What Does Globalization Have to Do With the Erosion of Welfare
... for the production and sale of goods and non-financial services. In all these dimensions, then, economic globaliza.tion is apparently integrating national economies into what is increasingly a single world economy. If so, it is evidently one to which there is no corresponding political structure cap ...
... for the production and sale of goods and non-financial services. In all these dimensions, then, economic globaliza.tion is apparently integrating national economies into what is increasingly a single world economy. If so, it is evidently one to which there is no corresponding political structure cap ...
Forms of Economic Globalization - sugarhoover ¨¨ rit´s portfolio
... economy, share of foreign trade or exports in GDP, foreign investments and international payments are the major indicators of the globalization within individual states. Industry globalization is clearly illustrated first of all by the share of intraindustry trade - world production ratio and the fa ...
... economy, share of foreign trade or exports in GDP, foreign investments and international payments are the major indicators of the globalization within individual states. Industry globalization is clearly illustrated first of all by the share of intraindustry trade - world production ratio and the fa ...
PDF
... address the role of institutions (institutional environment) and governance structures. These include an “index of the effectiveness of environmental laws” and an “index of property rights protection in agriculture”; (3) explanatory variables that address the role of social capital. These include an ...
... address the role of institutions (institutional environment) and governance structures. These include an “index of the effectiveness of environmental laws” and an “index of property rights protection in agriculture”; (3) explanatory variables that address the role of social capital. These include an ...
Document
... Economists use the term “nominal” for values that have not been corrected for inflation and “real” for those that have. However, most of the documents you see use the terms “current” for non-corrected values and “constant” for corrected values. This is what we will use. ...
... Economists use the term “nominal” for values that have not been corrected for inflation and “real” for those that have. However, most of the documents you see use the terms “current” for non-corrected values and “constant” for corrected values. This is what we will use. ...
Modeling the Unemployment Rate at the Eu Level
... identify convergence clubs in unemployment dynamics. The first comprises the Baltic States, Hungary, and Poland, and the second group of countries is composed of the Czech Republic and Slovakia. Interestingly, this classification matches the labor market policies and institutional divergences observed ...
... identify convergence clubs in unemployment dynamics. The first comprises the Baltic States, Hungary, and Poland, and the second group of countries is composed of the Czech Republic and Slovakia. Interestingly, this classification matches the labor market policies and institutional divergences observed ...
History, Expectations and Development
... clearly better than the PSII, With complementarities, the cost of using either console depends on how many other people are using it. We can have 2 equilibria: everybody buys N, everybody buys PSII. ...
... clearly better than the PSII, With complementarities, the cost of using either console depends on how many other people are using it. We can have 2 equilibria: everybody buys N, everybody buys PSII. ...
Frictionless Models in a World Full of Frictions
... called “animal spirits,” may create frictions (disequilibrium or partial equilibrium) in the model, at least in the short run.4 As a result of animal spirits, one segment of economic agents may be more optimistic (or pessimistic) about the economy than another segment of agents. This optimism (or pe ...
... called “animal spirits,” may create frictions (disequilibrium or partial equilibrium) in the model, at least in the short run.4 As a result of animal spirits, one segment of economic agents may be more optimistic (or pessimistic) about the economy than another segment of agents. This optimism (or pe ...
Unemployment - Business @ UOW
... new jobs by employers and during these intervals the individuals are unemployed. Search activity, carried out by both workers and firms, involves information – gathering, applications, interviews and acceptance, all of which necessarily involve time. Structural Unemployment: This type of unemploymen ...
... new jobs by employers and during these intervals the individuals are unemployed. Search activity, carried out by both workers and firms, involves information – gathering, applications, interviews and acceptance, all of which necessarily involve time. Structural Unemployment: This type of unemploymen ...
Chapter 11 Applications of the Ramsey model
... jump at time 0 and the state variable, which remains a continuous function of , has a kink at time 0 Correspondingly, control variables are in economics often called jump variables or forward-looking variables. The latter name comes from the notion that a decision variable can immediately shift ...
... jump at time 0 and the state variable, which remains a continuous function of , has a kink at time 0 Correspondingly, control variables are in economics often called jump variables or forward-looking variables. The latter name comes from the notion that a decision variable can immediately shift ...
View/Open
... external factors, such as the weather, and because of rural poverty and income concentration, a result from past Government policies. The transport sector has a strong interdependence with the agricultural sector given the significant share of its cost to the farmers' production structure. According ...
... external factors, such as the weather, and because of rural poverty and income concentration, a result from past Government policies. The transport sector has a strong interdependence with the agricultural sector given the significant share of its cost to the farmers' production structure. According ...
Appendix THE GREEK ECONOMY MODEL
... The supply-side of the new model consists of four sectors: tradable, non-tradable, public and agricultural. The tradable sector consists of the manufacturing and mining sectors, while the non-tradable sector consists of electricity, trade, transport, communications, construction, housing and banking ...
... The supply-side of the new model consists of four sectors: tradable, non-tradable, public and agricultural. The tradable sector consists of the manufacturing and mining sectors, while the non-tradable sector consists of electricity, trade, transport, communications, construction, housing and banking ...
Labour Market Distortions and University
... graduates in the Nigerian labour market. The study emphasizes that serious distortions exist in the market for university graduates in Nigeria, giving rise to unacceptable high level of graduate unemployment. The phenomenon of rising graduate unemployment is bound to have serious adverse social and ...
... graduates in the Nigerian labour market. The study emphasizes that serious distortions exist in the market for university graduates in Nigeria, giving rise to unacceptable high level of graduate unemployment. The phenomenon of rising graduate unemployment is bound to have serious adverse social and ...
Financial and currency crises in Latin America
... as a shield against financial disruption. Thanks to a generous assistance package with contributions of the IMF and the US Treasury, Mexico met all its financial commitments in time. This helped rebuild investors’ confidence and by late 1995 capital inflows were booming again. A new sudden stop of c ...
... as a shield against financial disruption. Thanks to a generous assistance package with contributions of the IMF and the US Treasury, Mexico met all its financial commitments in time. This helped rebuild investors’ confidence and by late 1995 capital inflows were booming again. A new sudden stop of c ...
Full paper as a pdf-file
... The index is based on the sectoral share in GVA of branch k in region i ( z ik ). For each branch in a region the absolute values of the differences between region i and the average of all regions ( z k ) are summed. In contrast to Krugman we divide the index by 2 so that the index will take the val ...
... The index is based on the sectoral share in GVA of branch k in region i ( z ik ). For each branch in a region the absolute values of the differences between region i and the average of all regions ( z k ) are summed. In contrast to Krugman we divide the index by 2 so that the index will take the val ...
Another version of this paper is presented at Academy of... (AIB) Conference 2010 at Rio de Janero, Brazil
... agricultural sectors in which foreign firms have advantages over the local firms. With the treaty in place, the FDI is assumed to increase by 150%. The model simulation runs until the year 2030 in order to observe the effects of CAFTA in the short term and long term. The effect of CAFTA on the numbe ...
... agricultural sectors in which foreign firms have advantages over the local firms. With the treaty in place, the FDI is assumed to increase by 150%. The model simulation runs until the year 2030 in order to observe the effects of CAFTA in the short term and long term. The effect of CAFTA on the numbe ...
Transformation in economics
Transformation in economics refers to a long-term change in dominant economic activity in terms of prevailing relative engagement or employment of able individuals.Human economic systems undergo a number of deviations and departures from the ""normal"" state, trend or development. Among them are Disturbance (short-term disruption, temporary disorder), Perturbation (persistent or repeated divergence, predicament, decline or crisis), Deformation (damage, regime change, loss of self-sustainability, distortion), Transformation (long-term change, restructuring, conversion, new “normal”) and Renewal (rebirth, transmutation, corso-ricorso, renaissance, new beginning).Transformation is a unidirectional and irreversible change in dominant human economic activity (economic sector). Such change is driven by slower or faster continuous improvement in sector productivity growth rate. Productivity growth itself is fueled by advances in technology, inflow of useful innovations, accumulated practical knowledge and experience, levels of education, viability of institutions, quality of decision making and organized human effort. Individual sector transformations are the outcomes of human socio-economic evolution.Human economic activity has so far undergone at least four fundamental transformations:From nomadic hunting and gathering (H/G) to localized agricultureFrom localized agriculture (A) to internationalized industryFrom international industry (I) to global servicesFrom global services (S) to public sector (including government, welfare and unemployment, GWU)This evolution naturally proceeds from securing necessary food, through producing useful things, to providing helpful services, both private and public (See H/G→A→I→S→GWU sequence in Fig. 1). Accelerating productivity growth rates speed up the transformations, from millennia, through centuries, to decades of the recent era. It is this acceleration which makes transformation relevant economic category of today, more fundamental in its impact than any recession, crisis or depression. The evolution of four forms of capital (Indicated in Fig. 1) accompanies all economic transformations.Transformation is quite different from accompanying cyclical recessions and crises, despite the similarity of manifested phenomena (unemployment, technology shifts, socio-political discontent, bankruptcies, etc.). However, the tools and interventions used to combat crisis are clearly ineffective for coping with non-cyclical transformations. The problem is whether we face a mere crisis or a fundamental transformation (globalization→relocalization).