Wilderness Economics Must Look Through the Windshield, Not the
... protecting wildlands. They explain this in terms of protecting part of our natural heritage for future generations (bequest values), leaving some parts of the natural world relatively unmodified by humanity (existence value), or protecting future options (option values). These are the non-use or pas ...
... protecting wildlands. They explain this in terms of protecting part of our natural heritage for future generations (bequest values), leaving some parts of the natural world relatively unmodified by humanity (existence value), or protecting future options (option values). These are the non-use or pas ...
161. China`s Transition to a Knowledge Economy
... Department of Economics, School of Oriental and African Studies. ...
... Department of Economics, School of Oriental and African Studies. ...
Introduction: The Sixteen-Page Economic History of the World
... The crucial factor was the rate of technological advance. As long as technology improved slowly, material conditions could not permanently improve, even while there was cumulatively significant gain in the technologies. The rate of technological advance in Malthusian economies can be inferred from p ...
... The crucial factor was the rate of technological advance. As long as technology improved slowly, material conditions could not permanently improve, even while there was cumulatively significant gain in the technologies. The rate of technological advance in Malthusian economies can be inferred from p ...
Impact of Human Capital Development on Economic Growth in Nigeria
... national product (GNP) to total education in 1985-87 and 8 per cent in 1995-97. Ghana allocates an average of 20 per cent of its total expenditure to education yearly. Between 1986 and 1992, Botswana spent 21 per cent of her expenditure on education; Malaysia, 19 per cent; Kenya, 20 per cent; Uganda ...
... national product (GNP) to total education in 1985-87 and 8 per cent in 1995-97. Ghana allocates an average of 20 per cent of its total expenditure to education yearly. Between 1986 and 1992, Botswana spent 21 per cent of her expenditure on education; Malaysia, 19 per cent; Kenya, 20 per cent; Uganda ...
Week 3
... that is output per worker is the square root of capital per worker. Utilizing this relationship we can develop a table illustrating how an economy approaches the steady state year by year. Alternatively we can utilize the equation that determines changes in the capital stock - k sf (k ) k . B ...
... that is output per worker is the square root of capital per worker. Utilizing this relationship we can develop a table illustrating how an economy approaches the steady state year by year. Alternatively we can utilize the equation that determines changes in the capital stock - k sf (k ) k . B ...
Bonefeld (HHS-15-0004 final) - Pure
... access to subsistence. Adorno therefore argues that ‘all concepts, even the philosophical ones, refer to non-conceptualities’ (Adorno, 1990: 11). Say, the economic concept profit entails what it is not; that is, it entails the definite social relations between individuals as the vanished premise of ...
... access to subsistence. Adorno therefore argues that ‘all concepts, even the philosophical ones, refer to non-conceptualities’ (Adorno, 1990: 11). Say, the economic concept profit entails what it is not; that is, it entails the definite social relations between individuals as the vanished premise of ...
International Fragmentation and the New Economic Geography
... open macro-economics seemed to be saying no, at least in the context of small countries that produced only tradable goods. And yet, inflation rates differed across countries, small and large, and even PPP did not hold particularly well. The theory of trade in middle products suggested an explanation ...
... open macro-economics seemed to be saying no, at least in the context of small countries that produced only tradable goods. And yet, inflation rates differed across countries, small and large, and even PPP did not hold particularly well. The theory of trade in middle products suggested an explanation ...
Abstract
... that the response of output to ICT may be masked by measurement problems (McGuckin and Stiroh, 2000). The main results of this benchmarking exercise are: (1) Even before the mid-1990s, ICT had a much bigger impact on growth than steam and at least a similar impact to that of electricity in a similar ...
... that the response of output to ICT may be masked by measurement problems (McGuckin and Stiroh, 2000). The main results of this benchmarking exercise are: (1) Even before the mid-1990s, ICT had a much bigger impact on growth than steam and at least a similar impact to that of electricity in a similar ...
European Journal of Economic and Financial Research FROM
... Although the market is not a specific form of change and inherent in capitalist production, circulation, and ignoring the essential features that distinguish, some researchers warn a tendency to assess the inclusion of market mechanisms in the economy of socialist countries (as in the case of China, ...
... Although the market is not a specific form of change and inherent in capitalist production, circulation, and ignoring the essential features that distinguish, some researchers warn a tendency to assess the inclusion of market mechanisms in the economy of socialist countries (as in the case of China, ...
1 - The Ohio State University
... Capitalists lay out values for production: money for labor power, for objects of labor and for instruments of production. The workers set the means of production in motion and commodities are produced for eventual sale. In order to start all over again the capitalist must find a market for the produ ...
... Capitalists lay out values for production: money for labor power, for objects of labor and for instruments of production. The workers set the means of production in motion and commodities are produced for eventual sale. In order to start all over again the capitalist must find a market for the produ ...
how not to write about the rate of profit
... capacity of the capital to generate profit, potentially choking off further accumulation. After all, if we accept that capital is value set in motion to expand, why would any capitalist care that there was “too much” capital provided that it could generate a high rate of profit? Harvey says as much ...
... capacity of the capital to generate profit, potentially choking off further accumulation. After all, if we accept that capital is value set in motion to expand, why would any capitalist care that there was “too much” capital provided that it could generate a high rate of profit? Harvey says as much ...
Economies of Scarcity and Acquisition, Economies of Gift and
... presocial, “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short.” In 1930 John Maynard Keynes imagined at least the industrial West, despite its impending Great Depression, to be on the verge of solving at last the problem of absolute scarcity: “the economic problem may be solved, or at least in sight of solut ...
... presocial, “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short.” In 1930 John Maynard Keynes imagined at least the industrial West, despite its impending Great Depression, to be on the verge of solving at last the problem of absolute scarcity: “the economic problem may be solved, or at least in sight of solut ...
Economies of Scarcity and Acquisition, Economies of Gift and
... turn acting generously towards others, other members of one’s community, but also strangers, and not to demand and to acquire more endlessly and selfishly. Marcel Mauss’s classic study, The Gift, well demonstrates how goods and services in archaic economies effectively circulate according to princip ...
... turn acting generously towards others, other members of one’s community, but also strangers, and not to demand and to acquire more endlessly and selfishly. Marcel Mauss’s classic study, The Gift, well demonstrates how goods and services in archaic economies effectively circulate according to princip ...
Utopia and the Socialist Project
... Question and the Critique of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right was that of human emancipation. He criticised strategies of national, religious and ethnic liberation that focused on politics to the exclusion of other spheres of social action as a partial means and therefore utopian. Marx argued that politi ...
... Question and the Critique of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right was that of human emancipation. He criticised strategies of national, religious and ethnic liberation that focused on politics to the exclusion of other spheres of social action as a partial means and therefore utopian. Marx argued that politi ...
Louis Althusser and the Forms of Concealment of Capitalist
... Our view, commencing rather from Rancière’s analysis, incorporates the concept of fetishism into the theory of ideology and does not reject it as an idealistic construction. This, precisely, is how it succeeds in identifying the actual idealism that pervades many of the anthropological readings of t ...
... Our view, commencing rather from Rancière’s analysis, incorporates the concept of fetishism into the theory of ideology and does not reject it as an idealistic construction. This, precisely, is how it succeeds in identifying the actual idealism that pervades many of the anthropological readings of t ...
A southern perspective on development studies
... The new power centre and guardian of the capitalist world, the United States of America, which had arisen from the demise of Great Britain, sought new forms with which to organize the world economy. First came the founding of new rules for the flow of trade in general. Retrospectively, the Bretton W ...
... The new power centre and guardian of the capitalist world, the United States of America, which had arisen from the demise of Great Britain, sought new forms with which to organize the world economy. First came the founding of new rules for the flow of trade in general. Retrospectively, the Bretton W ...
Document
... We start modeling our economy once the above process has been completed. The newlydetermined economic conditions, characterized by technical progress in agriculture, population growth, and capital accumulation, are fully embedded in our basic framework. The model is also designed to capture the grad ...
... We start modeling our economy once the above process has been completed. The newlydetermined economic conditions, characterized by technical progress in agriculture, population growth, and capital accumulation, are fully embedded in our basic framework. The model is also designed to capture the grad ...
Russian Economics:From Marxism to Institutional Matrices Theory
... programs (Young, 2002). We think it is possible to state that scientists, who are seriously working in the area of economic theory, belong to one of these schools in a manifest or implicit way because they proceed from the assumptions accepted in the above named schools of economic thought even if t ...
... programs (Young, 2002). We think it is possible to state that scientists, who are seriously working in the area of economic theory, belong to one of these schools in a manifest or implicit way because they proceed from the assumptions accepted in the above named schools of economic thought even if t ...
Economic Development and Family Structure: from Pater Familias to
... has increased. In this new context, the incentives for intergenerational coresidence may eventually disappear. Under some restrictions on the parameters, in Section 4 we go one step further by endogenizing the human capital formation. This allows us to study the feedback effect of living arrangement ...
... has increased. In this new context, the incentives for intergenerational coresidence may eventually disappear. Under some restrictions on the parameters, in Section 4 we go one step further by endogenizing the human capital formation. This allows us to study the feedback effect of living arrangement ...
- The International Institute of Social and Economic
... The financial system was completely different in the planned Czechoslovak economy (before 1989) from what it is in a market economy. The former financial system generated special processes. An environment of centrally planned economy combined with non-democratic political system created specific fea ...
... The financial system was completely different in the planned Czechoslovak economy (before 1989) from what it is in a market economy. The former financial system generated special processes. An environment of centrally planned economy combined with non-democratic political system created specific fea ...
R
... finally be “able to rid ourselves of many of the pseudo-moral principles which have hag-ridden us” and blighted so many lives since human beings emerged on earth. In other words, economic progress is not only about greater material benefits, but also the basic moral improvement of society, resting o ...
... finally be “able to rid ourselves of many of the pseudo-moral principles which have hag-ridden us” and blighted so many lives since human beings emerged on earth. In other words, economic progress is not only about greater material benefits, but also the basic moral improvement of society, resting o ...
Business within Limits: Deep Ecology and Buddhist Economics Journal of Buddhist Ethics
... attachments to dualistic constructs and to evaluate organizations according to what they do instead of merely by such things as size or mission statement. In both Buddhism and Deep Ecology, Nelson points out, what is real are relations and processes instead of things, and the diversity and elaborati ...
... attachments to dualistic constructs and to evaluate organizations according to what they do instead of merely by such things as size or mission statement. In both Buddhism and Deep Ecology, Nelson points out, what is real are relations and processes instead of things, and the diversity and elaborati ...
Introduction to Economics
... aspect of the subject. Modern economists feel that economist should also suggest, how the scarce means should be further increased to satisfy more wants and attain good living. The propounder of this concept is Professor Samuelson, who presented the growth-oriented definition of Economics. According ...
... aspect of the subject. Modern economists feel that economist should also suggest, how the scarce means should be further increased to satisfy more wants and attain good living. The propounder of this concept is Professor Samuelson, who presented the growth-oriented definition of Economics. According ...
The Role of Seaports in the Process of Economic Growth
... and social impacts of seaport investments or to justify future port investments. In Tunisia, seaports constitute the most important transit points on borders which link national and international economies. Along the period 1987-2014, nearly 95 per cent of the total exchanged goods between Tunisia a ...
... and social impacts of seaport investments or to justify future port investments. In Tunisia, seaports constitute the most important transit points on borders which link national and international economies. Along the period 1987-2014, nearly 95 per cent of the total exchanged goods between Tunisia a ...