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A Many-Country Model of Industrialization
... should we not expect them to specialize according to their comparative advantages? We argue that both facts can be understood in a standard model of industrialization in which there are di¤erences in the income elasticity of demand across sectors and in which comparative advantage forces are present ...
... should we not expect them to specialize according to their comparative advantages? We argue that both facts can be understood in a standard model of industrialization in which there are di¤erences in the income elasticity of demand across sectors and in which comparative advantage forces are present ...
Introduction
... genders based on reinterpretations of sexual differences. Such genders may be radically different from ones we can now imagine. I argue that in some ways race is parallel to gender: races are (roughly) those groups that are situated hierarchically due to the interpretation of their physical features ...
... genders based on reinterpretations of sexual differences. Such genders may be radically different from ones we can now imagine. I argue that in some ways race is parallel to gender: races are (roughly) those groups that are situated hierarchically due to the interpretation of their physical features ...
PDF
... on the role of regulation and the design of environmental policy for achieving both environmental preservation and economic growth. Our analysis demonstrates that an unregulated economy can achieve non-decreasing environmental quality together with balanced growth if there exists strong preferences ...
... on the role of regulation and the design of environmental policy for achieving both environmental preservation and economic growth. Our analysis demonstrates that an unregulated economy can achieve non-decreasing environmental quality together with balanced growth if there exists strong preferences ...
Aalborg Universitet The Emancipatory Potential of Ecological Economics: A Thermodynamic Perspective
... supported by statistical evidence which revealed that the gap between rich and poor had widened; that poverty, hunger and disease persisted or had got worse; and that the majority of people in most Southern countries were living in greater hardship than at the time of decolonisation (Sachs 1993; Su ...
... supported by statistical evidence which revealed that the gap between rich and poor had widened; that poverty, hunger and disease persisted or had got worse; and that the majority of people in most Southern countries were living in greater hardship than at the time of decolonisation (Sachs 1993; Su ...
Trust, Social Networks and the Informal Economy: A Comparative
... We understand “trust” or confidence as a social concept whose meaning is culturally determined and therefore it should be ethnographically described, as it does not have the same meaning in different societies and for different situations (Rose-Akerman 2001: 420; Lomnitz 1977: 196). In general, trus ...
... We understand “trust” or confidence as a social concept whose meaning is culturally determined and therefore it should be ethnographically described, as it does not have the same meaning in different societies and for different situations (Rose-Akerman 2001: 420; Lomnitz 1977: 196). In general, trus ...
Trabajo presentado
... adjust to environmental policy measures through innovation, rather than by switching inputs or reducing output. Moreover, they also mention the fact that without innovation very high taxes are required to curb down CO2 emissions. ...
... adjust to environmental policy measures through innovation, rather than by switching inputs or reducing output. Moreover, they also mention the fact that without innovation very high taxes are required to curb down CO2 emissions. ...
'Institutional Patterns of the Settler Societies: Hybrid, Parallel, and Convergent',
... this chapter is that a materialist and substantivist approach to the longrun history of institutions, governance, and regulation is best able to explain what has to be seen as a pattern of parallel and convergent paths of economic and institutional development across the settler world. In essence, i ...
... this chapter is that a materialist and substantivist approach to the longrun history of institutions, governance, and regulation is best able to explain what has to be seen as a pattern of parallel and convergent paths of economic and institutional development across the settler world. In essence, i ...
S1500196_en.pdf
... inclusion. This process will help us tackle the challenges presented by modern society, in which a vast array of new stakeholders have come to the fore. Focusing our efforts in this direction will enable us to exploit the windows of opportunity that present themselves when human talent is transforme ...
... inclusion. This process will help us tackle the challenges presented by modern society, in which a vast array of new stakeholders have come to the fore. Focusing our efforts in this direction will enable us to exploit the windows of opportunity that present themselves when human talent is transforme ...
global political economy
... pragmatism and pioneered by the rebel American economist, Thorstein Veblen. Chapter 6 discusses more contemporary approaches, Regulation and Regime theories, as examples of what I call ‘weak’ systems theory. World System and Long Cycle theory on the other hand, discussed in Chapter 7, are ‘strong’ s ...
... pragmatism and pioneered by the rebel American economist, Thorstein Veblen. Chapter 6 discusses more contemporary approaches, Regulation and Regime theories, as examples of what I call ‘weak’ systems theory. World System and Long Cycle theory on the other hand, discussed in Chapter 7, are ‘strong’ s ...