196 results
Search Results
2. Blood Lifestyle: Externalizing the Cost of Human Life
- Author
-
Model, David
- Abstract
To build postsecondary institutions that educate responsible citizens as well as competent employees and consumers, it is important that people must teach and learn themselves about the context--domestic and global--in which work is to be done, and the purposes which economic and technological development serve. One aspect of that context is the tremendous human cost of modern prosperity. A moral inquiry into human suffering is surely at least as important as the passing on of the technical skills needed to keep the machinery in motion. A significant historical example concerns the 10 million inhabitants of the Congo Free State who paid the price for King Leopold II's greed and brutality when he opportunistically forced them into slave labour to extract sap from rubber trees to sell to the embryonic automobile industry in the 1890s. Today, externalization of costs insidiously hides cheap labour, unsafe and unhealthy working conditions, destruction of the environment and ubiquitous toxins which have worked their way up to the top of the food chain in mother's milk. Shockingly, human life has become an externalized cost as a direct consequence of the unsustainable lifestyle of people in North America. Literally millions of people have died or been injured as a result of their extravagant lifestyle which, for example, requires enormous quantities of fossil fuels for transportation and the manufacture of consumer or capital products. Paradoxically, due to their consumption habits and lifestyle, they are assigning a value to human life which can be calculated by dividing the resulting excessive purchases germane to perpetual unsustainable growth divided by the number of casualties who have become victims of the American pursuit of economic advantages. Human life has no price. It is alarming that it is held in such low regard, and it is unconscionable that people in North America pay so little attention to their own culpability in social injustice at home and abroad.
- Published
- 2012
3. Keynes, population, and equity prices.
- Author
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Tarascio VJ
- Subjects
- Americas, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, North America, United States, Commerce, Demography, Economics, Financial Management, Models, Economic, Models, Theoretical, Population, Population Dynamics, Population Growth, Research, Social Planning, Socioeconomic Factors
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. "Death and taxes": a contrary view.
- Author
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Manton KG, Soldo BJ, and Vierck E
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Americas, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Government Programs, Health Services, Medicine, North America, United States, Adult, Age Distribution, Aged, Demography, Disease, Economics, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Financial Management, Health, Health Expenditures, Life Expectancy, Longevity, Mortality, Politics, Population, Population Characteristics, Population Dynamics, Public Policy
- Published
- 1984
5. Today, more than ever, we as human beings can do something about the problems around us. From the Advisory Council.
- Author
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Tempelsman M
- Subjects
- Africa, Africa South of the Sahara, Americas, Asia, Asia, Southeastern, Delivery of Health Care, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Disease, HIV Infections, Health, North America, Technology, Thailand, United States, Virus Diseases, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome, Economics, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Health Services, Research, Vaccines
- Published
- 2000
6. Alternative financial institutions? Sustainability, development, social reproduction, and gender analysis.
- Author
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Kidder T
- Subjects
- Americas, Central America, Developing Countries, Latin America, Nicaragua, North America, Organization and Administration, Research, Economics, Feminism, Financial Management, Program Evaluation
- Published
- 1999
7. Population age structure and asset returns: an empirical investigation.
- Author
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Poterba JM
- Subjects
- Adult, Americas, Demography, Developed Countries, Employment, North America, Population, Population Characteristics, Social Class, United States, Age Factors, Aged, Economics, Retirement, Socioeconomic Factors
- Abstract
"This paper investigates the association between population age structure, particularly the share of the population in the 'prime saving years' 45-60, and the returns on stocks and bonds. The paper is motivated by the claim that the aging of the 'Baby Boom' cohort in the United States is a key factor in explaining the recent rise in asset values. It also addresses the associated claim that asset prices will decline when this large cohort reaches retirement age and begins to reduce its asset holdings. This paper begins by considering household age-asset accumulation profiles. Data from the Survey of Consumer Finances suggest that while cross-sectional age-wealth profiles peak for households in their early 60s, cohort data on the asset ownership of the same households show a much less pronounced peak.... The paper then considers the historical relationship between demographic structure and real returns on Treasury bills, long-term government bonds, and corporate stock. The results do not suggest any robust relationship between demographic structure and asset returns.... The paper concludes by discussing factors such as international capital flows and forward-looking behavior on the part of market participants that could weaken the relationship between age structure and asset returns in a single nation.", (excerpt)
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Population, environment and security: a new trinity.
- Author
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Hartmann B
- Subjects
- Americas, Conservation of Natural Resources, Developed Countries, North America, Politics, Public Policy, Research, United States, Developing Countries, Economics, Environment, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Industry, Models, Theoretical, Population Dynamics, Social Control, Formal, Warfare, Women
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Investment, population growth and GNP as determinants of US immigration.
- Author
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Kritz MM
- Subjects
- Americas, Demography, Developed Countries, Financial Management, North America, Population, Population Dynamics, Transients and Migrants, United States, Economics, Emigration and Immigration, Investments, Population Growth, Public Policy
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The unemployment insurance compensation. Usage of Canada's immigrants in selected provinces, 1981-1988.
- Author
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Siklos PL and Marr W
- Subjects
- Americas, Canada, Demography, Developed Countries, Geography, North America, Population, Population Characteristics, Population Dynamics, Research, Transients and Migrants, Economics, Emigration and Immigration, Ethnicity, Longitudinal Studies, Public Policy, Residence Characteristics, Social Welfare
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Vancouver AIDS conference: special report. AIDS and development: the tangled nexus between economic growth and social equality.
- Author
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Whiteside A
- Subjects
- Africa, Africa South of the Sahara, Africa, Southern, Americas, Canada, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Disease, North America, Virus Diseases, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome, Congresses as Topic, Culture, Disease Outbreaks, Economics, HIV Infections, Socioeconomic Factors
- Published
- 1996
12. Vancouver AIDS conference: special report. The epidemic now: current status and latest trends of HIV / AIDS in Africa -- a consensus update.
- Subjects
- Africa, Africa South of the Sahara, Americas, Canada, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Disease, Equipment and Supplies, Infections, North America, Research, Research Design, Virus Diseases, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome, Congresses as Topic, Disease Outbreaks, Economics, HIV Infections, Prevalence, Sexually Transmitted Diseases
- Published
- 1996
13. Adolescent premarital childbearing: do economic incentives matter?
- Author
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Lundberg S and Plotnick RD
- Subjects
- Americas, Culture, Demography, Developed Countries, Ethnicity, Fertility, North America, Population, Population Characteristics, Population Dynamics, Pregnancy, Reproduction, Research, Sexual Behavior, United States, Black or African American, Economics, Logistic Models, Models, Theoretical, Pregnancy Outcome, Pregnancy in Adolescence, Public Policy, White People
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Chile.
- Subjects
- Americas, Chile, Communication, Culture, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Environment, Financial Management, Geography, Health Workforce, Latin America, Longevity, Mortality, North America, Population Characteristics, Population Dynamics, Social Class, Socioeconomic Factors, South America, United States, Urban Population, Conservation of Natural Resources, Demography, Economics, Educational Status, Employment, Ethnicity, Government, Government Publications as Topic, Industry, Infant Mortality, International Cooperation, Language, Life Expectancy, Politics, Population, Population Growth, Religion, Urbanization
- Published
- 1992
15. Follow the leader: On the relationship between leadership and scholarly impact in international collaborations.
- Author
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Chinchilla-Rodríguez, Zaida, Sugimoto, Cassidy R., and Larivière, Vincent
- Subjects
CORPORATE culture ,GOVERNMENT aid to research ,SCIENCE & state ,LEADERSHIP - Abstract
National contributions to science are influenced by a number of factors, including economic capacity, national scientific priorities, science policy, and institutional settings and cultures. Nations do not have equal opportunities to access the global scientific market, and therefore, often seek out international partners with complementary resources and expertise. This study aims at investigating national collaboration strategies, with a focus on research leadership—measured through corresponding authorship—and its relationship with scientific impact. Results show that countries with higher R&D investments are more scientifically independent, and confirm that international collaboration is positively related to citation impact. However, leadership in international collaboration is inversely related with a countries’ share of international collaboration and there is a very little relationship between citation impact and international leadership. For instance, most countries—and particularly those that have fewer resources—have higher scientific impact when they are not leading. This suggests that, despite increasing global participation in science, most international collaborations are asymmetrical, and that the research system remains structured around a few dominate nations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. An aging society: opportunity or challenge?
- Author
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Cutler DM, Poterba JM, Sheiner LM, and Summers LH
- Subjects
- Americas, Developed Countries, Financial Management, North America, Population, United States, Demography, Economics, Efficiency, Income, Population Dynamics, Public Policy, Taxes
- Abstract
"This paper steps back from the current political debate [in the United States] over the social security trust fund and examines the more general question of how serious a macroeconomic problem aging is and how policy should respond to it. We focus primarily on issues relating to saving and capital accumulation. We do not consider the broader question of whether the current U.S. national saving rate is too high or too low, but focus on the effect of demographic changes on the optimal level of national saving. In addition, we consider the effects of demographic change on productivity growth and the optimal timing of tax collections. Our general conclusion is that demographic changes will improve American standards of living in the near future, but lower them slightly over the very long term. Other things being equal, the optimal policy response to recent and anticipated demographic changes is almost certainly a reduction rather than an increase in the national saving rate.", (excerpt)
- Published
- 1990
17. A Stay-Rich View of the New Global Economy
- Abstract
Major demographic changes around the world. Disproportionate sovereign debt. A shift from North America, Western Europe, and Japan to emerging economies as centers of growth. Unprecedented levels of market risk and volatility. The structure of the global economy is undergoing significant changes. Michael Oyster, managing principal of Fund Evaluation Group, explored this topic with Sam DeRosa-Farag, principal of the investment team at Morgan Creek Capital Management, and Stephen Wood, chief market strategist at Russell Investments.
- Published
- 2011
18. Stop the Feast or Famine Mode.
- Author
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Pastoor, Dirk
- Subjects
PAPERBOARD industry ,INTERNATIONAL competition ,PAPERBOARD boxes ,PAPER products ,MERGERS & acquisitions ,PAPERMAKING machinery ,PRICE increases ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
The article presents the author's insights regarding the global economy on the paperboard packaging system. He says that production of paper and board in North America has gone down due to the merging and closure of paper machine companies. He criticizes the price increase imposed by the integrated board of suppliers wherein buyers hard to adapt. He mentions that the solution to the problem of failing companies is the price itself which needs to be considered for customers to be able to adjust.
- Published
- 2010
19. Resource allocation decisions in low-income rural households.
- Author
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Franklin DL and Harrell MW
- Subjects
- Agriculture, Americas, Behavior, Central America, Conservation of Natural Resources, Costs and Cost Analysis, Demography, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Environment, Health, Latin America, North America, Panama, Population, Population Characteristics, Population Dynamics, Public Policy, Research, Sampling Studies, Social Class, Social Planning, Socioeconomic Factors, Data Collection, Decision Making, Economics, Food Supply, Models, Economic, Models, Theoretical, Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Poverty, Rural Population, Time Factors
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The baby boom, the baby bust, and the housing market.
- Author
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Mankiw NG and Weil DN
- Subjects
- Americas, Developed Countries, Fertility, Geography, North America, Population, Population Characteristics, Residence Characteristics, Social Sciences, Socioeconomic Factors, United States, Age Factors, Commerce, Demography, Economics, Housing, Income, Marketing of Health Services, Ownership, Population Dynamics, Population Growth
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The long and the short in migration decisions: an American case study.
- Author
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Gill F
- Subjects
- Americas, Culture, Demography, Developed Countries, Ethnicity, North America, Population, Population Characteristics, Research, United States, Black or African American, Economics, Emigration and Immigration, Models, Theoretical, Population Dynamics
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The impact of population size and the economy on welfare caseloads: the special case of welfare reform.
- Author
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Brazzell JF
- Subjects
- Americas, Developed Countries, North America, United States, Washington, Economics, Health Services Needs and Demand, Social Welfare
- Published
- 1989
23. Poisson regression models of Canadian census division migration flows.
- Author
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Flowerdew R and Amrhein C
- Subjects
- Americas, Canada, Demography, Developed Countries, Emigration and Immigration, Geography, North America, Population, Research, Economics, Health Services Accessibility, Housing, Models, Theoretical, Population Dynamics, Residence Characteristics, Socioeconomic Factors
- Abstract
"This paper examines the amount, spatial pattern, and correlates of migration in Canada at the census division scale. The effects of distance, economic prosperity, social and cultural conditions, community size, and the housing market are investigated.... Poisson regression techniques were used to avoid the estimation problems frequently encountered in log-normal regression.", (excerpt)
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Demographic trends and saving propensities: "a revisit with life cycle theory"..
- Author
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Owens EW
- Subjects
- Americas, Demography, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, North America, Social Sciences, United States, Age Distribution, Age Factors, Economics, Family, Family Characteristics, Financial Management, Income, Life Cycle Stages, Population, Population Characteristics, Population Dynamics, Socioeconomic Factors, Taxes
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Economic adaptation of refugees in Canada: experience of a quarter century.
- Author
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Samuel TJ
- Subjects
- Americas, Canada, Demography, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Employment, Income, North America, Occupations, Population, Population Dynamics, Unemployment, Economics, Emigration and Immigration, Refugees, Socioeconomic Factors, Transients and Migrants
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Challenging issues in the study of fiscally-induced migration.
- Author
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Winer SL
- Subjects
- Americas, Canada, Demography, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Income, North America, Population, Socioeconomic Factors, Economics, Emigration and Immigration, Employment, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Financial Management, Financing, Government, Models, Theoretical, Population Dynamics, Research, Social Class, Unemployment
- Published
- 1986
27. Contributions of other socio-economic factors to the fertility differentials of women by education: a multivariate approach.
- Author
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Das Gupta P
- Subjects
- Americas, Culture, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Health Workforce, North America, Population Characteristics, Research, Software, United States, Demography, Economics, Educational Status, Employment, Ethnicity, Fertility, Income, Marriage, Multivariate Analysis, Occupations, Population, Population Dynamics, Social Class, Socioeconomic Factors, Statistics as Topic
- Published
- 1984
28. Barbados.
- Subjects
- Americas, Barbados, Caribbean Region, Communication, Demography, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Environment, Family Planning Services, North America, Social Class, Social Sciences, Socioeconomic Factors, Agriculture, Climate, Commerce, Conservation of Natural Resources, Economics, Educational Status, Financial Management, Geography, Government, Health Planning, Industry, International Cooperation, Language, Politics, Population, Population Characteristics, Population Density, Population Dynamics, Religion
- Published
- 1987
29. Panama.
- Subjects
- Americas, Central America, Communication, Demography, Developing Countries, Environment, Latin America, North America, Panama, Population, Population Characteristics, Social Sciences, Agriculture, Climate, Conservation of Natural Resources, Culture, Economics, Ethnicity, Geography, Government, Industry, Language, Politics, Population Dynamics, Religion
- Published
- 1989
30. Normative and microeconomic models of voluntary childlessness.
- Author
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Dietz T
- Subjects
- Americas, Catholicism, Christianity, Demography, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Employment, Fertility, Income, North America, Population, Population Characteristics, Population Dynamics, Religion, Social Class, Socioeconomic Factors, United States, Economics, Family Planning Services, Sexual Behavior
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Household saving and demographic change, 1950-2050.
- Author
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Wachtel P
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Americas, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, North America, Population, Population Characteristics, Social Sciences, United States, Age Distribution, Birth Rate, Demography, Economics, Family Characteristics, Fertility, Financial Management, Forecasting, Income, Population Dynamics, Population Growth, Research, Research Design, Socioeconomic Factors, Statistics as Topic
- Published
- 1984
32. Economic recession and migrant/minority youth in Western Europe and the United States.
- Author
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Limage LJ
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Americas, Demography, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Europe, Health Planning, North America, Organization and Administration, Population, Population Characteristics, Population Dynamics, United States, Adolescent, Economics, Education, Emigration and Immigration, Employment, Information Services, Minority Groups, Politics, Public Policy, Transients and Migrants
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Metropolitan migration and population growth in selected developing countries.
- Subjects
- Africa, Algeria, Americas, Argentina, Asia, Birth Rate, Brazil, Central America, Chile, Colombia, Developed Countries, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Geography, Ghana, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Iran, Korea, Latin America, Mexico, Mortality, North America, Peru, Philippines, Population Characteristics, Population Density, Singapore, Socioeconomic Factors, South Africa, South America, Syria, Thailand, Venezuela, Demography, Developing Countries, Economics, Emigration and Immigration, Population, Population Dynamics, Population Growth, Social Planning, Transients and Migrants, Urban Population, Urbanization
- Published
- 1983
34. The impact of economic recessions on health workers: a systematic review and best-fit framework synthesis of the evidence from the last 50 years.
- Author
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Russo, Giuliano, Silva, Tiago Jesus, Gassasse, Zakariah, Filippon, Jonathan, Rotulo, Arianna, and Kondilis, Elias
- Subjects
RECESSIONS ,ECONOMIC impact ,GREAT Recession, 2008-2013 ,SUPPLEMENTARY employment ,FINANCIAL crises ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,HEALTH policy ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,ECONOMICS ,RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Economic crises carry a substantial impact on population health and health systems, but little is known on how these transmit to health workers (HWs). Addressing such a gap is timely as HWs are pivotal resources, particularly during pandemics or the ensuing recessions. Drawing from the empirical literature, we aimed to provide a framework for understanding the impact of recessions on HWs and their reactions. We use a systematic review and best-fit framework synthesis approach to identify the relevant qualitative, quantitative and mixed-methods evidence, and refine an a priori, theory-based conceptual framework. Eight relevant databases were searched, and four reviewers employed to independently review full texts, extract data and appraise the quality of the evidence retrieved. A total of 57 peer-reviewed publications were included, referring to six economic recessions. The 2010-15 Great Recession in Europe was the subject of most (52%) of the papers. Our consolidated framework suggests that recessions transmit to HWs through three channels: (1) an increase in the demand for services; (2) the impacts of austerity measures; and (3) changes in the health labour market. Some of the evidence appeared specific to the context of crises; demand for health services and employment increased during economic recessions in North America and Oceania, but stagnated or declined in Europe in connection with the austerity measures adopted. Burn-out, lay-offs, migration and multiple jobholding were the reactions observed in Europe, but job opportunities never dwindled for physicians during recessions in North America, with nurses re-entering labour markets during such crises. Loss of motivation, absenteeism and abuse of health systems were documented during recessions in low-income countries. Although the impacts of recessions may vary across economic events, health systems, labour markets and policy responses, our review and framework provide an evidence base for policies to mitigate the effects on HWs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Are Regional Concentrations of OECD Exports and Outward FDI Consistent with Gravity?
- Author
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Hejazi, Walid
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL business enterprises ,ECONOMICS ,EXPORTS - Abstract
A substantial amount of evidence has emerged indicating that a majority of the world's largest multinational enterprises concentrate activities in their home region. However, there are relatively few studies which test whether such concentrations are consistent with economic theory. This paper works to fill the void. It tests whether regional concentrations of OECD exports and outward FDI are consistent with predictions of a gravity model. The empirical evidence provided here indicates that exports are far more regional than the model predicts. As for FDI, the empirical evidence shows that intra-regional FDI in Europe is larger than the model predicts, whereas intra-regional FDI patterns within North America are consistent with gravity. Overall, this paper provides further support for Rugman's thesis that MNEs are best described as regional as opposed to global actors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Putting your money where your mouth is: Geographic targeting of World Bank projects to the bottom 40 percent.
- Author
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Öhler, Hannes, Negre, Mario, Smets, Lodewijk, Massari, Renzo, and Bogetić, Željko
- Subjects
MONEY ,INCOME inequality ,CAPITAL cities ,REGRESSION analysis ,STATISTICAL correlation - Abstract
The adoption of the shared prosperity goal by the World Bank in 2013 and Sustainable Development Goal 10, on inequality, by the United Nations in 2015 should strengthen the focus of development interventions and cooperation on the income growth of the bottom 40 percent of the income distribution. This paper contributes to the incipient literature on within-country allocations of development institutions and assesses the geographic targeting of World Bank projects to the bottom 40 percent. Bivariate correlations between the allocation of project funding approved over 2005–14 and the geographical distribution of the bottom 40 as measured by survey income or consumption data are complemented by regressions with population and other potential factors affecting the within-country allocations as controls. The correlation analysis shows that, of the 58 countries in the sample, 41 exhibit a positive correlation between the shares of the bottom 40 and World Bank funding, and, in almost half of these, the correlation is above 0.5. Slightly more than a quarter of the countries, mostly in Sub-Saharan Africa, exhibit a negative correlation. The regression analysis shows that, once one controls for population, the correlation between the bottom 40 and World Bank funding switches sign and becomes significant and negative on average. This is entirely driven by Sub-Saharan Africa and not observed in the other regions. Hence, the significant and positive correlation in the estimations without controlling for population suggests that World Bank project funding is concentrated in administrative areas in which more people live (including the bottom 40) rather than in poorer administrative areas. Furthermore, capital cities receive disproportionally high shares of World Bank funding on average. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Do public officials exhibit social class biases when they handle casework? Evidence from multiple correspondence experiments.
- Author
-
Carnes, Nicholas and Holbein, John
- Subjects
SOCIAL classes ,PUBLIC officers ,ETHNOLOGY ,SOCIAL sciences ,SERVICES for poor people - Abstract
Are public officials more responsive to requests from affluent or poor constituents? A growing body of evidence suggests that lawmakers are more responsive to the rich when they craft policy. However, some scholars theorize that officials also exhibit a corresponding bias in favor of the poor when they handle casework, essentially giving policy to the rich and services to the poor. In this paper, we test this casework prediction using four experiments in which confederates sent simple requests to state or local officials. In each, our confederates’ reported social classes were randomly assigned and signaled with a brief introductory statement mentioning the sender’s occupation or economic situation. Across our samples, we find precisely-estimated null effects of social class biases: the officials we studied were equally likely to respond regardless of the constituent’s class. These findings raise doubts about whether casework is really a class-biased process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Recasting the North American Social Imaginary: Outlines of an Alternative Continentalism.
- Author
-
Kurasawa, Fuyuki
- Subjects
CONTINENTALISM ,POLITICAL doctrines ,CULTURAL pluralism ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper employs the concept of americanity (américanité) developed in the francophone Québécois sociology of culture as a point of entry to outline a hemispheric social imaginary. It begins by discussing how americanity can help to pluralize North American modernity in a transcultural and global direction. Americanity is then discussed in relation to the 'Canadian School' of political theory, in order to develop an interpretation of culture that foregrounds the idea of identitarian ambivalence while being politically agonistic in orientation. Finally, in an attempt to correct the cultural determinism of most writings on americanity, the paper brings in the tradition of Canadian political economy to propose a vision of an alternative continentalism that recognizes socio-cultural pluralism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
39. 'What Good Will Two More Trees Do?' The Political Economy of Sustainable Coffee Certification, Local Livelihoods and Identities.
- Author
-
Lyon, Sarah
- Subjects
UNFAIR competition ,ECONOMICS ,COFFEE industry ,TROPICAL conditions ,JUNGLE ecology ,CULTURAL identity ,CULTURAL values ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors - Abstract
In recent years the North American sustainable coffee market, consisting of Fair Trade, organic and shade-grown certified varieties, has steadily increased. This paper explores the local history and daily practice of sustainable coffee cultivation among a group of Guatemalan small coffee growers and investigates the extent to which these are accurately reflected in certification standards and marketing. Their participation in the organic coffee market generates three sources of tension: first, the tension between a place- and time-bound indigeneity, and the reality of the growers' sophisticated organic production and processing strategies. Second, the tension between the regional history of organic production as liberatory practice, and the organic consumer movement whose meanings and practices historically have been defined in North America and Europe. Finally, a tension exists between certification standards developed primarily in the interest of tropical conservation and the ways that producers' understandings of their landscape and environment are shaped by how they produce their livelihoods. The paper explores each of these in turn and in doing so illuminates how the sustainable coffee market is capable of moulding political-economic forces and distant places while reshaping livelihoods and processes of cultural identification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. DEVELOPING PURCHASING'S FOUNDATION.
- Author
-
LEENDERS, MICHIEL R. and FEARON, HAROLD E.
- Subjects
PURCHASING ,SUPPLY chain management ,BUSINESS logistics management ,SUPPLY & demand ,VALUE engineering ,COST control ,BUSINESS success ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This is the first of a two-part paper, which reviews the evolution of the supply management function from the 18th century to 1940. A second paper will examine the continued evolution of supply management from 1940 until the present. The 1830–1940 period in North America was one of tremendous development for purchasing. It started with occasional reference in management texts and, particularly after 1900, saw the evolution of a host of ideas representing the foundation of today's perspective on supply management. At no time did purchasing practitioners and academics see the function as a narrow buying activity. Clearly, our predecessors were well aware of the benefits of integration and would have been comfortable with today's supply chain management precepts. They also recognized value, cost and price analysis, value analysis, purchasing research, talent management, outsourcing the supply function, supplier relationships, strategy and the need for performance measurement. They strived to contribute effectively to organizational goals and strategies, well aware of the potential impact of their actions on organizational success. An understanding of supply's evolution may not only assist today's supply management practitioners and academics in placing current practices and theories in context but also in charting our future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Are Brokers' Commission Rates on Home Sales Too High? A Conceptual Analysis.
- Author
-
Anglin, Paul and Arnott, Richard
- Subjects
RESIDENTIAL real estate ,REAL property ,REAL estate agents ,ECONOMIC equilibrium ,HOUSING market ,MARKETS ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Many people in North America believe that prevailing commission rates for residential real estate brokers are too high, even though such beliefs are not based on a formal model. This paper presents a general equilibrium model of the housing market in which real estate brokers serve as matching intermediaries. We use this model to construct an illustrative example which is calibrated using data consistent with a typical housing market. The example suggests that the commission rate which maximizes aggregate efficiency is considerably below the prevailing rate. Moreover, this finding appears to be robust to changes in the matching process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Integrating social equity into urban transportation planning: A critical evaluation of equity objectives and measures in transportation plans in North America.
- Author
-
Manaugh, Kevin, Badami, Madhav G., and El-Geneidy, Ahmed M.
- Subjects
- *
URBAN transportation policy , *TRANSPORTATION planning , *ECONOMIC impact analysis , *METROPOLITAN areas , *ECONOMIC indicators , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
Urban transport policies are characterized by a wide range of impacts, and trade-offs and conflicts among these impacts. The task of integrating and reconciling these impacts poses challenges, because they are incommensurable, and they affect different groups differentially. Further, impacts such as those related to social equity are hard to define and measure. In this paper we address two inter-related questions: How is social equity conceptualized, operationalized, and prioritized relative to environmental and other objectives; and how might social equity be more effectively integrated in urban transportation plans in North America? We critically analyze how social equity is incorporated into transportation plans in 18 large North American metropolitan areas, in terms of the quality of the related objectives, how meaningfully their achievement is assessed through the choice of performance measures or indicators, and their prioritization relative to other objectives. We observe that social equity goals and objectives are in many cases not translated into clearly specified objectives, and appropriate measures for assessing their achievement in a meaningful, disaggregated manner are often lacking. At the same time, there are good examples of social equity objectives and measures in several plans. In general, there is a stronger focus on the local environment (and congestion reduction) than on social equity in the plans. We end the paper with a discussion related to considerations for generating objectives and measures for better integrating social equity into urban transportation plans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Moving beyond positivism: reflexive collaboration in understanding agritourism across North American boundaries.
- Author
-
Ainley, Suzanne and Kline, Carol
- Subjects
AGRITOURISM ,TOURISM research ,FAMILY farms ,BUSINESS skills ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Extant agritourism studies have employed positivistic methodologies and quantitative approaches. As such, these approaches have predominately concluded that economics motives the diversification in agritourism at the expense of uncovering the complexity of multiple factors involved. Captured in this paper are the experiences of two, independent North American (agri)tourism researchers who used interpretative research approaches, specifically interpretative phenomenological analysis and appreciative inquiry, for getting at a deeper understanding of the complexity of agritourism on family farms. Agritourism is revealed as a transitional process, and supporting farms getting into agritourism would best be accomplished through building business skills and entrepreneurial capacities. Likewise, networks are critical, especially farmer-to-farmer connections. Interpretative research methods uncovered a more holistic and complex understanding of agritourism. This perspective will better inform farmers, their families, as well as policy-makers when they design and implement new businesses, programmes, and policies in the best interest of farm families and rural communities. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The trials of theory: psychology and institutionalist economics, 1910-1931.
- Author
-
Bycroft M
- Subjects
- Historiography, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, Humans, Models, Economic, North America, Psychological Theory, Psychology, Industrial history, Economics history, Philosophy history, Psychology history
- Abstract
The rise of the institutionalist school of economics, in the 1910s and 1920s, has recently been given the historical attention it deserves. However, historical studies of the school have left two questions unanswered. First, to what extent was the institutionalist's interest in academic psychology (frequently declared in their meta-economic writings) realized in their economic writings? Second, what evidence of a fruitful collaboration with institutional economics can be found in the work of psychologists? In this paper I consider the meta-economic statements of three key institutionalists, Wesley C. Mitchell, John M. Clark, and Walton H. Hamilton, and two key economic works by Mitchell and Clark. I contend that these works show little systematic engagement of academic psychology. A study of psychological literature of the period yields the same conclusion; in particular, industrial psychology did not come into fruitful contact with institutional economics, despite the parallel interests of the two fields and their parallel rise after World War I., (Copyright 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Economic Costs of Sustaining Water Supplies: Findings from the Rio Grande.
- Author
-
Ward, Frank and Pulido-Velazquez, Manuel
- Subjects
GEOLOGICAL basins ,DROUGHTS ,CLIMATE change ,RESERVOIRS - Abstract
Water claims in many of the world's arid basins exceed reliable supplies. Water demands for irrigation, urban use, the environment, and energy continue to grow, while supplies remain constrained by unsustainable use, drought and impacts of climate change. For example, policymakers in North America's Upper Rio Grande Basin face the challenge of designing plans for allocating the basin's water supplies efficiently and fairly to support current uses and current environments. Managers also seek resilient institutions that can ensure adequate supplies for future generations. This paper addresses those challenges by designing and applying an integrated basin-scale framework that accounts for the basin's most important hydrologic, economic, and institutional constraints. Its unique contribution is a quantitative analysis of three policies for addressing long term goals for the basin's reservoirs and aquifers: (1) no sustainability for water stocks, (2) sustaining water stocks, and (3) renewing water stocks. It identifies water use and allocation trajectories over time that result from each of these three plans. Findings show that it is hydrologically and institutionally feasible to manage the basin's water supplies sustainably. The economic cost of protecting the sustainability of the basin's water stocks can be achieved at 6-11 percent of the basin's average annual total economic value of water over a 20 year time horizon. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Gains from Trade when Firms Matter.
- Author
-
Melitz, Marc J and Trefler, Daniel
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL trade ,INTERNATIONAL economic integration ,INTRA-industry trade ,UNITED States economic policy ,COMMERCIAL policy ,HETEROGENEITY ,ECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
The rising prominence of intra-industry trade and huge multinationals has transformed the way economists think about the gains from trade. In the past, we focused on gains that stemmed either from endowment differences (wheat for iron ore) or inter-industry comparative advantage (David Ricardo's classic example of cloth for port). Today, we focus on three sources of gains from trade: 1) love-of-variety gains associated with intra-industry trade; 2) allocative efficiency gains associated with shifting labor and capital out of small, less-productive firms and into large, more-productive firms; and 3) productive efficiency gains associated with trade-induced innovation. This paper reviews these three sources of gains from trade both theoretically and empirically. Our empirical evidence will be centered on the experience of Canada following its closer economic integration in 1989 with the United States-the largest example of bilateral intra-industry trade in the world-but we will also describe evidence for other countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Post-consumer cullet and potential engineering applications in North America.
- Author
-
Majdinasab, Alireza and Yuan, Qiuyan
- Subjects
NATURAL resources ,GLASS waste ,CONCRETE pavements ,CERAMIC industries ,MARKET potential - Abstract
• An outlook toward the cullet collection, marketing, and applications was provided. • Several cullet end markets from construction to ceramics industries were discussed. • Restricting cullet landfilling applications should be encouraged by governments. • Selecting a dual-stream system makes cullet processing stage more cost-effective. • Developing stable high-demand markets benefits both end consumers and recyclers. Waste glass cullet (WGC) recovered from almost all waste streams is contaminated with mixed-color sources of variable compositions. Consequently, over 60% of the cullet is discarded in landfills in North America. The present work provides an overview of the potential end markets for the cullet with a focus on collection systems, marketing strategies, safety and environmental issues as well as the economics of the target applications. Cullet can find major applications in construction industry as a substitute to natural aggregates integrated with different proportions of concrete to build pavements, and roads Cullet could be widely used in different applications due to its desirable physical, mechanical, and chemical properties. This makes cullet an appropriate alternative for natural resources. Although various applications discussed in this paper have well-established markets, low proportion of cullet has been implemented in those applications. This could be attributed to the higher preprocessing cost of cullet compared to the natural aggregates. Different measures are required by the governments to continue to develop the potential post-consumer markets for recycled cullet such as encouraging recycling of WGC and restricting the use of landfilling activities for WGC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Landscape As Infrastructure.
- Author
-
Bélanger, Pierre
- Subjects
BROWNFIELDS ,HAZARDS ,LANDSCAPES ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
According to a national report on brownfields redevelopment titled Recycling America~ Land (USCM 2006), more than 400,000 sites with real or perceived environmental hazards dot the American landscape today. That legacy is estimated to be worth more than $2 trillion in devalued property. Underlying this legacy is a major network of post-war infrastructures--airports, harbours, roads, sewers, bridges, dikes, dams, power corridors, terminals, treatment plants--that is now suffering major decay from lack of repair and maintenance (ASCE 2008, Infrastructure Canada 2007-2008, Choate and Walter 1983). In revisiting a series of milestone events in the history of North America. this paper draws a cross-section through phases of industrialization in the 191h and 20th centuries in order to track how the necessity for infrastructure accidentally emerged from crisis and failure. A series of patterns and shifts are identified to expose the paradoxical, sometimes toxic relationship between pre-industrial landscape conditions and modern industrial systems. The underlying objective of this essay is to redefine the conventional meaning of modern infrastructure by amplifying the biophysical landscape that it has historically suppressed, and to reformulate landscape as a sophisticated, instrumental system of essential resources, services, and agents that generate and support urban economies. Three contemporary streams of development including urban ecologies, bio-industries, and waste economies are explored briefly to discuss future fields of practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The effect of high oil prices on EOR project economics.
- Author
-
McCoy, Sean T. and Rubin, Edward S.
- Subjects
PETROLEUM product sales & prices ,BREAK-even analysis ,GEOLOGICAL carbon sequestration ,ENHANCED oil recovery ,ENGINEERING economy ,ECONOMIC models ,ALTERNATIVE fuels ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Abstract: This paper examines two questions: (1) in a high oil price (and operating cost) environment what are typical breakeven prices for CO
2 ? and, (2) are these prices sufficient to incentivize development of large-scale CCS projects? To address these questions we have developed an engineering-economic model for geological storage of CO2 through EOR. In this paper we briefly describe the performance and cost models for CO2 -flood EOR, and use them to estimate the breakeven price for CO2 as a function of significant variables. In particular, the relationship between breakeven CO2 price and oil price is developed for four illustrative cases, all of which are, or were, operating EOR projects in North America. The sensitivity of the breakeven CO2 price to variability and uncertainty in reservoir characteristics and other model input parameters is also examined in detail for one of the cases. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Economic development lessons from and for North American Indian economies.
- Author
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Anderson, Terry L. and Parker, Dominic P.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,LITERATURE ,RESEARCH ,ECONOMICS ,NATURAL resources ,PROPERTY rights - Abstract
This paper reviews the literature on economic development as it relates to indigenous people in the United States and Canada, and focuses on how institutions affect economic development of reservation and reserve economies. Evidence shows that strong property rights to reservation and reserve land and natural resources, whether communal or individual, are and always have been important determinants of productivity. Political and legal institutions that are perceived as stable and predictable to tribal members and to non-Natives also improve economic opportunities for indigenous people living on reservations and reserves. Research reviewed here also shows that culture and acculturation are important in the development process. Although our emphasis is on North America, the findings are applicable to indigenous people in other parts of the world and shed light on growth questions that loom large for developing countries around the world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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