Slides
... Support Team (DST). The advice, recommendations and information in the document included with this notice were prepared for the sole benefit of the New York State Department of Health, based on the specific facts and circumstances of the New York State Department of Health, and its use is limited to ...
... Support Team (DST). The advice, recommendations and information in the document included with this notice were prepared for the sole benefit of the New York State Department of Health, based on the specific facts and circumstances of the New York State Department of Health, and its use is limited to ...
piracy of digital products: a critical review of the economics literature
... obtained at a given price, which possibly varies across consumers. This price may be zero; it is positive if the pirated good is costly to acquire or if there are expected cost from being detected. The non-authorized copy therefore limits the monopoly power of the supplier of the original. We would ...
... obtained at a given price, which possibly varies across consumers. This price may be zero; it is positive if the pirated good is costly to acquire or if there are expected cost from being detected. The non-authorized copy therefore limits the monopoly power of the supplier of the original. We would ...
The Importance of Brand Name and Quality in the
... reduce buying risk. These studies, however, cannot be used to analyze the retail food industry where retail food products are considered experience goods Nelson (1970) and, therefore, their quality is evident, and there is no need for quality signaling through branding or pricing. Defining this "sub ...
... reduce buying risk. These studies, however, cannot be used to analyze the retail food industry where retail food products are considered experience goods Nelson (1970) and, therefore, their quality is evident, and there is no need for quality signaling through branding or pricing. Defining this "sub ...
The age of disruption - Are Canadian firms prepared?
... wearables. How we interact with each other, and our world, has evolved in ways we couldn’t have imagined a few years go. These same technologies are changing the nature of work as well, forcing companies and workers alike to rethink where, when and how work gets done. ...
... wearables. How we interact with each other, and our world, has evolved in ways we couldn’t have imagined a few years go. These same technologies are changing the nature of work as well, forcing companies and workers alike to rethink where, when and how work gets done. ...
Persuasive Advertising and Product Line Design
... strategy exclusively, i.e., for only part of its product line or for the entire product line and how such a choice might interact with the design of the product quality and the pricing decision. Henceforth we will use the terms “uniform” when the firm uses persuasive appeal on all its products and “ ...
... strategy exclusively, i.e., for only part of its product line or for the entire product line and how such a choice might interact with the design of the product quality and the pricing decision. Henceforth we will use the terms “uniform” when the firm uses persuasive appeal on all its products and “ ...
strategic alliances and corporate social capital
... Interorganizational Trust. At the firm level of analysis, trust is associated with positive experiences and expectations of the transacting parties, and usually reduces the perceived risks in undertaking future transactions. At the interorganizational level, trust provides a basis for one firm to ac ...
... Interorganizational Trust. At the firm level of analysis, trust is associated with positive experiences and expectations of the transacting parties, and usually reduces the perceived risks in undertaking future transactions. At the interorganizational level, trust provides a basis for one firm to ac ...
A Non-Price-Discrimination Theory of Rebates
... example, consider a consumer who has just bought a big-screen TV, only to discover that he has been laid off; the consumer’s marginal utility of income will increase under these circumstances. In general, when a product is not consumed instantaneously, the utility that a consumer derives from it will ...
... example, consider a consumer who has just bought a big-screen TV, only to discover that he has been laid off; the consumer’s marginal utility of income will increase under these circumstances. In general, when a product is not consumed instantaneously, the utility that a consumer derives from it will ...
Pepall_chpt_015 - Blackwell Publishing
... – with N = 11 we need rR > 0.966 – with N = 13 we need rR > 0.972 – collusion would seem to need a very high r and high R • but the time period between trades is probably less than an hour • so r is approximately unity • and the relevant interest-rate is a per-hour interest rate • so in this setting ...
... – with N = 11 we need rR > 0.966 – with N = 13 we need rR > 0.972 – collusion would seem to need a very high r and high R • but the time period between trades is probably less than an hour • so r is approximately unity • and the relevant interest-rate is a per-hour interest rate • so in this setting ...
Law, Finance, and Economic Growth in China
... find that the law-finance-growth nexus established by existing literature works well for the State and Listed Sectors in China: with poor legal protections of minority and outside investors, (standard) external markets are weak, and growth of these firms is slow or negative. However, the size, grow ...
... find that the law-finance-growth nexus established by existing literature works well for the State and Listed Sectors in China: with poor legal protections of minority and outside investors, (standard) external markets are weak, and growth of these firms is slow or negative. However, the size, grow ...
Why Should Small Firms Adopt eBusiness? A Framework for
... have any) and goals. In summary, owners and their business goals vary widely and eBusiness research needs to be more sophisticated by taking into account this diversity. This will be further exacerbated when small firms are owned by more than one person, who will each have different characteristics. ...
... have any) and goals. In summary, owners and their business goals vary widely and eBusiness research needs to be more sophisticated by taking into account this diversity. This will be further exacerbated when small firms are owned by more than one person, who will each have different characteristics. ...
A CUSTOMER-PREFERENCE UNCERTAINTY MODEL FOR DECISION-ANALYTIC CONCEPT SELECTION
... approximation to bootstrap, is binomial inference. Binomial inference may be explained using a coin-flipping analogy [15]. In coin flipping, if we observe H heads and T tails in H+T flips, an uncertainty of probability of head is modeled by a beta distribution with parameter (H, T). Applying a simil ...
... approximation to bootstrap, is binomial inference. Binomial inference may be explained using a coin-flipping analogy [15]. In coin flipping, if we observe H heads and T tails in H+T flips, an uncertainty of probability of head is modeled by a beta distribution with parameter (H, T). Applying a simil ...