22 results on '"Stylianou, Ioanna"'
Search Results
2. Tackling pandemic‐related health grand challenges : The role of organizational ambidexterity, social equality, and innovation performance
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Christofi, Michael, Stylianou, Ioanna, Hadjielias, Elias, De Massis, Alfredo, Kastanakis, Minas N., Christofi, Michael, Stylianou, Ioanna, Hadjielias, Elias, De Massis, Alfredo, and Kastanakis, Minas N.
- Abstract
The outbreak of COVID‐19 has brought the world to a standstill, with severe consequences on economic and health systems, requiring the identification and implementation of innovative solutions. This study's aims are threefold: first, to examine the impact of balanced and combined dimensions of ambidexterity on for‐profit organizations' innovation performance related to pandemics; second, to uncover whether and to what extent such innovation performance contributes to tackling global health grand challenges (i.e., mortality rate, risk of infection, and life expectancy) associated with pandemics; and, third, to investigate the moderating role of social equalities in health in the relationships between innovation performance and health‐related outcomes associated with pandemics. To uncover how for‐profit firms tackle the health‐related consequences of pandemics, we examine whether they have introduced product innovations to the health sector, defined as the market introduction of a new or significantly improved good, that have helped address the health challenges associated with the COVID‐19 pandemic. Using a panel dataset (1974–2020) with 15,062 firm‐year observations from the United States, we show that both the separate and the synchronous implementation of the balanced and combined dimensions of ambidexterity have a strong positive effect on firms' innovation performance and, particularly, innovation initiatives related to the pandemic. The results also reveal that innovation activities (i.e., granted patents and citations focused on COVID‐19) negatively affect mortality rate and risk of infection, as well as the positive impact of innovation on increasing life expectancy, with social equalities in health moderating this relationship. Taken together, we make novel contributions to the literature on how to tackle the health‐related consequences of pandemics through innovation and provide actionable managerial guidance on how firms can enhance innovation performance.
- Published
- 2024
3. Socio-Economic Factors Affecting ESG Reporting Call for Globally Agreed Standards
- Author
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Krambia-Kapardis, Maria, primary, Savva, Christos S., additional, and Stylianou, Ioanna, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Tackling pandemic‐related health grand challenges:The role of organizational ambidexterity, social equality, and innovation performance
- Author
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Christofi, Michael, Stylianou, Ioanna, Hadjielias, Elias, De Massis, Alfredo, Kastanakis, Minas N., Christofi, Michael, Stylianou, Ioanna, Hadjielias, Elias, De Massis, Alfredo, and Kastanakis, Minas N.
- Abstract
The outbreak of COVID-19 has brought the world to a standstill, with severe consequences on economic and health systems, requiring the identification and implementation of innovative solutions. This study's aims are threefold: first, to examine the impact of balanced and combined dimensions of ambidexterity on for-profit organizations’ innovation performance related to pandemics; second, to uncover whether and to what extent such innovation performance contributes to tackling global health grand challenges (i.e., mortality rate, risk of infection, and life expectancy) associated with pandemics; and, third, to investigate the moderating role of social equalities in health in the relationships between innovation performance and health-related outcomes associated with pandemics. To uncover how for-profit firms tackle the health-related consequences of pandemics, we examine whether they have introduced product innovations to the health sector, defined as the market introduction of a new or significantly improved good, that have helped address the health challenges associated with the COVID-19 pandemic. Using a panel dataset (1974–2020) with 15,062 firm–year observations from the US, we show that both the separate and the synchronous implementation of the balanced and combined dimensions of ambidexterity have a strong positive effect on firms’ innovation performance and, particularly, innovation initiatives related to the pandemic. The results also reveal that innovation activities (i.e., granted patents and citations focused on COVID-19) negatively affect mortality rate and risk of infection, as well as the positive impact of innovation on increasing life expectancy, with social equalities in health moderating this relationship. Taken together, we make novel contributions to the literature on how to tackle the health-related consequences of pandemics through innovation and provide actionable managerial guidance on how firms can enhance innovation performance.
- Published
- 2023
5. Socio-economic Factors Affecting ESG Reporting Call for Globally Agreed Standards
- Author
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Krambia-Kapardis, Maria, Savva, Christos S., Stylianou, Ioanna, Krambia-Kapardis, Maria, Savva, Christos S., and Stylianou, Ioanna
- Abstract
The main aim of this paper is to firstly investigate if all components of ESG are equally reported by companies and secondly to identify the impact political and economic institutions and macroeconomic variables have on the composite ESG index. Utilizing data for environment, social and governance from Refinitiv and constructing composite indices based on the Principal Component Analysis, the authors investigate the effect of socio-economic factors on ESG over the period 1984-2020 for 139 countries using a Panel Fixed Effects model with structural breaks. The results reveal that there is an increasing trend for the Social, Governance and aggregate ESG indices, but not for the Environment index where the trend is decreasing. Moreover, considering the role of economic and political institutions and macroeconomic variables, higher levels of corruption, civil disorder, civil war, economic and financial risk, ethnic and religious tensions, foreign pressures, risk in law and order, military in politics and inflation, have a negative effect on ESG performance. In contrast, income per capita and trade openness have a positive impact on ESG performance with heterogeneous results before and after 2010. The findings have significant policy, practical and social implications emphasizing the importance for ESG reporting to be uniformly implemented with globally accepted standards.
- Published
- 2023
6. Tackling pandemic-related health grand challenges: The role of organizational ambidexterity, social equality, and innovation performance
- Author
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Christofi, Michael, Stylianou, Ioanna, Hadjielias, Elias, De Massis, Alfredo, N. Kastanakis, Minas, Christofi, Michael, Stylianou, Ioanna, Hadjielias, Elias, De Massis, Alfredo, and N. Kastanakis, Minas
- Abstract
The outbreak of COVID-19 has brought the world to a standstill, with severe consequences on economic and health systems, requiring the identification and implementation of innovative solutions. This study's aims are threefold: first, to examine the impact of balanced and combined dimensions of ambidexterity on for-profit organizations' innovation performance related to pandemics; second, to uncover whether and to what extent such innovation performance contributes to tackling global health grand challenges (i.e., mortality rate, risk of infection, and life expectancy) associated with pandemics; and, third, to investigate the moderating role of social equalities in health in the relationships between innovation performance and health-related outcomes associated with pandemics. To uncover how for-profit firms tackle the health-related consequences of pandemics, we examine whether they have introduced product innovations to the health sector, defined as the market introduction of a new or significantly improved good, that have helped address the health challenges associated with the COVID-19 pandemic. Using a panel dataset (1974–2020) with 15,062 firm-year observations from the United States, we show that both the separate and the synchronous implementation of the balanced and combined dimensions of ambidexterity have a strong positive effect on firms' innovation performance and, particularly, innovation initiatives related to the pandemic. The results also reveal that innovation activities (i.e., granted patents and citations focused on COVID-19) negatively affect mortality rate and risk of infection, as well as the positive impact of innovation on increasing life expectancy, with social equalities in health moderating this relationship. Taken together, we make novel contributions to the literature on how to tackle the health-related consequences of pandemics through innovation and provide actionable managerial guidance on how firms can enhance innovation performance.
- Published
- 2023
7. Ethical Leadership as a Prerequisite for Sustainable Development, Sustainable Finance, and ESG Reporting
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Dion, Michel, Krambia-Kapardis, Maria, Stylianou, Ioanna, Savva, Christos S., Dion, Michel, Krambia-Kapardis, Maria, Stylianou, Ioanna, and Savva, Christos S.
- Abstract
The first part of the chapter will contextualize sustainable development and disentangle it from environmental, social, and governance (ESG). The second part will locate the leadership qualities needed which synthesizes sustainable development and ESG reporting, while the third part will put it in context of sustainable finance. As advocated by BlackRock (Sustainability goes mainstream. 2020 Global Sustainable Investing Survey. https://www.blackrock.com/corporate/literature/publication/blackrock-sustainability-survey.pdf, 2020), sustainability is here to stay, and over time investors have demonstrated their interest in addressing ESG considerations. ESG includes human rights; environmental pollution; healthcare; social problems; elimination of poverty; equal rights in the workplace; stronger compliance with local, state, federal, and international laws; diversity; etc. The European Commission (sustainable finance and EU taxonomy: commission takes further steps to channel money towards sustainable activities https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_21_1804, 2021a; What is sustainable finance. A new sustainable finance strategy and implementation of the action plan on financing sustainable growth. https://ec.europa.eu/info/business-economy-euro/banking-and-finance/sustainable-finance/overview-sustainable-finance_en, 2021b) added transparency to ESG, especially in cases of risks regarding the financial and worldwide economy. Is it possible to have a sustainable business and sustainable finance without ethical leadership? In support of Sharma et al. (Leadersh Org Dev J 40(6):712–734, 2019), many leaders today consider ethics important. It is considered that the leaders ought to look out for the people, fairness, sustainability, and integrity. Leaders need to be open to allocating power, giving clear ethical directions at their workplace, building respect, honesty, sincerity, equality, and transparency. It has also been argued that leaders need to foster
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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8. Failure to launch? The role of land inequality in transition delays
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Kourtellos, Andros, Stylianou, Ioanna, and Tan, Chih Ming
- Published
- 2013
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9. Nonlinear nexus between corruption and tourism arrivals: a global analysis
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Stylianou, Ioanna, Krambia-Kapardis, Maria, Demetriou, Salomi, Stylianou, Ioanna, Krambia-Kapardis, Maria, and Demetriou, Salomi
- Abstract
The relationship between corruption and tourism has been sporadically examined over the years. According to the existing theory, there is an inverted U relationship which implies that tourism demand initially increases as corruption increases (greasing the wheels) and after a certain threshold level of corruption, tourism demand decreases (sanding the wheels). Empirical studies so far concentrated on capturing the nonlinear relationship, by applying a simple linear model and by including corruption as a quadratic term. In the current paper, the authors revisit the “greasing and sanding the wheels” hypothesis by applying an advanced econometric technique, the threshold regression model, which deals with a key element of model uncertainty, namely, parameter heterogeneity. In particular, using a sample of 83 countries from 2001-2018 the authors firstly examine if there is a nonlinear relationship between corruption and tourism and then, they estimate the threshold value of corruption. According to the results the null hypothesis of a linear model against the alternative of a threshold model with two regimes is strongly rejected. Furthermore, whilst the effect of corruption on tourism is positive in the low corruption regime and negative in the high corruption regime, a heterogeneous relationship is also found between other politicosocio-economic variables and tourism demand in the low and high corruption regimes.
- Published
- 2022
10. Nonlinear nexus between corruption and tourism arrivals: a global analysis.
- Author
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Kapardis, Maria, Stylianou, Ioanna, Demetriou, Salomi, Kapardis, Maria, Stylianou, Ioanna, and Demetriou, Salomi
- Abstract
The relationship between corruption and tourism has been sporadically examined over the years. According to the existing theory, there is an inverted U relationship which implies that tourism demand initially increases as corruption increases (greasing the wheels) and after a certain threshold level of corruption, tourism demand decreases (sanding the wheels). Empirical studies so far concentrated on capturing the nonlinear relationship, by applying a simple linear model and by including corruption as a quadratic term. In the current paper, the authors revisit the “greasing and sanding the wheels” hypothesis by applying an advanced econometric technique, the threshold regression model, which deals with a key element of model uncertainty, namely parameter heterogeneity. In particular, using a sample of 83 countries from 2001 to 2018, the authors firstly examine if there is a nonlinear relationship between corruption and tourism, and then, they estimate the threshold value of corruption. According to the results, the null hypothesis of a linear model against the alternative of a threshold model with two regimes is strongly rejected. Furthermore, while the effect of corruption on tourism is positive in the low corruption regime and negative in the high corruption regime, a heterogeneous relationship is also found between other politico-socio-economic variables and tourism demand in the low and high corruption regimes.
- Published
- 2022
11. International marketing studies in banking and finance: a comprehensive review and integrative framework
- Author
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Battisti, Enrico, Graziano, Elvira Anna, Leonidou, Erasmia, Stylianou, Ioanna, Pereira, Vijay, Battisti, Enrico, Graziano, Elvira Anna, Leonidou, Erasmia, Stylianou, Ioanna, and Pereira, Vijay
- Abstract
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to provide a comprehensive analysis of international marketing (IM) studies within the context of banking and finance (B&F), articulating its significance and relevance in view of the growing influence of this topic in the global economy. Design/methodology/approach The systematic review methodology was applied for the purpose of identifying the relevant studies, as well as the key themes and dominant concepts. In establishing a quality benchmark for the review results, the final sample included articles published in peer-reviewed academic journals ranked 3, 4 and 4* in the ABS 2018 journal list, a common practice in existing systematic review studies. Findings Based on a systematic review of 66 studies, the results reveal that the topic has grown and continues to expand within the broader IM field over the past 35 years. From the proposed integrative framework, it is possible to identify the links between several IM subjects and B&F topics, highlighting a different intensity of studies and in-depth analysis among the various specific areas investigated. Originality/value The authors map and critically evaluate the extant IM research in B&F context for the purpose of increasing its coherence, scope and international dimension. Finally, the authors present a multidisciplinary, integrative framework that organizes the existing literature, provides the theoretical basis for scholars to further expand the boundaries of the domain and serves as a guiding tool for practitioners.
- Published
- 2021
12. Mapping the Auditors’ Knowledge: A Preliminary Empirical Study in Cyprus
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Dimitriou, Salomi, Krambia-Kapardis, Maria, and Stylianou, Ioanna
- Subjects
Social Sciences ,Other Social Sciences - Published
- 2019
13. Nonlinear Nexus Between Corruption And Tourism Arrivals: An International Perspective
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Krambia-Kapardis, Maria, Stylianou, Ioanna, and Demetriou, Salomi
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Social Sciences ,Other Social Sciences - Published
- 2019
14. Contextualizing compliance officers and their state of practice
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Krambia-Kapardis, Maria, Stylianou, Ioanna, Dimitriou, Salomi, Krambia-Kapardis, Maria, Stylianou, Ioanna, and Dimitriou, Salomi
- Abstract
The compliance officers’ profession has been evolving over the last few decades. The expectations placed upon the individuals holding such a position vary across jurisdictions but they are all expected to ensure employees and management of the business entity comply with the law. Given the limited research on compliance officers in Europe, and the increasing public interest in this profession, the current authors have carried out a survey in Cyprus in an effort to map out and contextualize the compliance officers’ profession. The findings illustrate compliance officers’ academic and professional qualifications, their awareness of their legal liability and the level of knowledge and job performance of their duties as prescribed by law, as well as gaps in the performance of duties as expected by management, boards and regulators. The policy implications derived from the study suggest coherence and synergies to be found through common exam and postgraduate qualification in the field of financial compliance.
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- 2019
15. Disentangling the Expectation Gap for Compliance officers
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Krambia-Kapardis, Maria, Dimitriou, Salomi, Stylianou, Ioanna, Krambia-Kapardis, Maria, Dimitriou, Salomi, and Stylianou, Ioanna
- Published
- 2019
16. Contextualizing compliance officers and their state of practice
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Krambia‐Kapardis, Maria, primary, Stylianou, Ioanna, additional, and Demetriou, Salomi, additional
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- 2019
- Full Text
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17. Robust multiple regimes in growth volatility
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Kourtellos, Andros, Stylianou, Ioanna, Tan, Chih Ming, and Kourtellos, Andros [0000-0001-9662-0420]
- Published
- 2014
18. Robust multiple regimes in growth volatility
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Kourtellos, Andros, Stylianou, Ioanna, Tan, Chih Ming, Kourtellos, Andros, Stylianou, Ioanna, and Tan, Chih Ming
- Abstract
In this paper, we uncover growth volatility regimes and identify their robust determinants using a large international panel of countries. In doing so, we propose a novel empirical methodology that allows us to simultaneously deal with two key elements of model uncertainty, namely theory uncertainty and parameter heterogeneity, by unifying two recent econometric techniques: Bayesian model averaging and threshold regression. We find ample evidence of parameter heterogeneity and model uncertainty.Our results highlight the role of ethnic fractionalization, institutions, financial development, health, and geography.
- Published
- 2015
19. Μελέτη για τις δομικές αλλαγές, την οικονομική ανάπτυξη και τη διακύμανση της οικονομικής ανάπτυξης
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Stylianou, Ioanna M., Kourtellos, Andros, Κούρτελλος, Άντρος, Ανδρέου, Έλενα, Χριστοφίδης, Λούης, Dalgaard, Carl-Johan, Durlauf, Steven, Andreou, Elena, Christofides, Louis, University of Cyprus, Faculty of Economics and Management, Department of Economics, and Πανεπιστήμιο Κύπρου, Σχολή Οικονομικών Επιστημών και Διοίκησης, Τμήμα Οικονομικών
- Subjects
Economic development Cyprus ,ΚΥΠΡΟΣ ,Economic development ,ΕΚΠΑΙΔΕΥΣΗ ,MODEL UNCERTAINTY ,GROWTH VOLATILITY ,CYPRUS ,ΔΙΑΚΥΜΑΝΣΗ ΟΙΚΟΝΟΜΙΚΗΣ ΑΝΑΠΤΥΞΗΣ ,DURATION ANALYSIS ,MULTIPLE REGIMES ,ΑΒΕΒΑΙΟΤΗΤΑ ΜΟΝΤΕΛΟΥ ,ΑΝΑΛΥΣΗ ΔΙΑΡΚΕΙΑΣ ΖΩΗΣ ,Economic development Mathematical models ,GROWTH TAKEOFFS ,ΑΝΑΛΥΣΗ ΜΟΝΑΔΙΑΙΑΣ ΡΙΖΑΣ ,UNIT ROOT TESTS ,INSTITUTIONS ,THRESHOLD REGRESSION__STRUCTURAL BREAKS ,VAR ,CO-INTEGRATION ,SCHOOLING ,THRESHOLD REGRESSION ,ΣΥΝΟΛΟΚΛΗΡΩΣΗ - Abstract
Includes bibliography (p. 175-191). Number of sources in the bibliography: 126 Thesis (Ph. D.) -- University of Cyprus, Faculty of Economics and Management, Department of Economics, June 2012. The University of Cyprus Library holds the printed form of the thesis. Το βασικό θέμα αυτής της διατριβής είναι πως οι δομικές αλλαγές στο μακροοικονομικό επίπεδο επηρεάζουν την οικονομική ανάπτυξη, όπως επίσης, και τη διακύμανση των ρυθµών οικονοµικής ανάπτυξης. Συγκεκριμένα, σε αυτή τη διατριβή εξετάζονται τρία θέματα: Στο Κεφάλαιο Δύο στα πλαίσια μιας μονομεταβλητής και πολυμεταβλητής ανάλυσης εξετάζονται οι ιδιότητες βασικών μακροοικονομικών μεταβλητών της Κυπριακής Οικονομίας εφαρμόζοντας στατιστικούς ελέγχους που επιτρέπουν την παρουσία ενδογενών και εξωγενών δομικών αλλαγών. Στο Κεφάλαιο Τρία, εξετάζουμε εμπειρικά εάν η κατανομή της γής αποτελεί καθοριστικό παράγοντα της αειφόρου και μακροχρόνιας οικονομικής ανάπτυξης, ενώ στο Κεφάλαιο Τέσσερα, αναλύουμε εάν οι χώρες μπορούν να κατανεμηθούν σε ομάδες με βάση τη διακύμανση των ρυθµών οικονοµικής ανάπτυξης, ενώ ταυτόχρονα εξετάζουμε τους προσδιοριστικούς της παράγοντες. Το Κεφάλαιο Ένα περιλαμβάνει μια συνοπτική ανασκόπηση των αποτελεσμάτων που προέκυψαν από αυτή την ανάλυση. Είναι αναμφισβήτητο το γεγονός ότι η Κυπριακή Οικονομία έχει υποστεί μια πλειάδα εσωτερικών και εξωτερικών σοκ και συνεπώς, στο Κεφάλαιο Δύο, εξετάζουμε την επίδραση αυτών των σοκ σε βασικές μακροοικονομικές μεταβλητές, λαμβάνοντας υπόψη την ύπαρξη τόσο ενδογενών όσο και εξωγενών δομικών αλλαγών σε ελέγχους μοναδιαίας ρίζας, όπως αυτοί προτείνονται από την βιβλιογραφία. Εξετάζουμε παράλληλα, την βραχυχρόνια και τη μακροχρόνια σχέση των μεταβλητών λαμβάνοντας υπόψη την παρουσία δομικών αλλαγών. Σύμφωνα με τα αποτελέσματα, η μηδενική υπόθεση της μοναδιαίας ρίζας δεν απορρίπτεται για όλες τις μεταβλητές, ενώ οι δομικές αλλαγές που εντοπίζονται, συνδέονται με σημαντικές αλλαγές νομισματικής πολιτικής, όπως επίσης και με γεγονότα οικονομικής και πολιτικής φύσεως. Οι δομικές αυτές αλλαγές επηρεάζουν τη βραχυχρόνια σχέση, αλλά όχι τη μακροχρόνια σχέση των μεταβλητών. Πρόσφατες μελέτες στην βιβλιογραφία έχουν αναπτύξει διάφορες θεωρίες όσον αναφορά τις αιτίες που οι χώρες δεν μπορούν να επιτύχουν ένα επίπεδο αειφόρου ανάπτυξης και γενικά για την αποτυχία οικονομικής σύγκλισης μεταξύ των χωρών. Το Κεφάλαιο Τρία, στηρίζει εμπειρικά μια από αυτές τις θεωρίες: Την (αρχική) ανισότητα όσον αναφορά την κατανομή της γης. Στα πλαίσια αυτά, περιγράφουμε τις οδούς μέσα από τις οποίες η ανισότητα όσον αναφορά την κατανομή της γης επηρεάζει την μακροχρόνια οικονομική ανάπτυξη. Χρησιμοποιώντας ιστορικά στοιχεία για την κατανομή της γής (Frankema (2009)) και εφαρμόζοντας την “Ανάλυση Διάρκειας Ζωής”, εξετάζουμε εάν υψηλότερα επίπεδα ανισότητας στη γη, αποτελεί τροχοπέδη στην ανάπτυξη του επιπέδου της πρωτοβάθμιας εκπαίδευσης. Παράλληλα, εξετάζουμε εάν η επιβράδυνση αυτή επηρεάζει την μακροχρόνια οικονομική ανάπτυξη μέσω του επιπέδου εκπαίδευσης σήμερα. Σύμφωνα με τα ευρήματα μας, τα επίπεδα ανισότητας της γής επηρεάζουν αρνητικά τα επίπεδα εκπαίδευσης σήμερα καθώς επίσης, και το μακροχρόνιο προϊόν. Στο Κεφάλαιο Τέσσερα αναλύουμε εάν οι χώρες μπορούν να κατανεμηθούν σε ομάδες με βάση τη διακύμανση των ρυθµών οικονοµικής ανάπτυξης, ενώ ταυτόχρονα εξετάζουμε τους προσδιοριστικούς της παράγοντες χρησιμοποιώντας ένα μεγάλο αριθμό χωρών. Ως εκ τούτου, χρησιμοποιούμε μια μεθοδολογία, την Bayesian Model Averaging and Structural Threshold Regression (STR), που λαμβάνει υπόψη την αβεβαιότητα ως τον προσδιορισμό του μοντέλου (ετερογένεια και ενδογένεια). Σύμφωνα με τα αποτελέσματα, οι χώρες μπορούν να κατανεμηθούν ως προς τη διακύμανση των ρυθµών οικονοµικής ανάπτυξης αν λάβουμε υπόψη τα επίπεδα του αρχικού κατακεφαλή ΑΕΠ και του δημόσιου χρέους. Ταυτόχρονα, τα επίπεδα των πολιτικών ιδρυμάτων και της δημογραφίας, επηρεάζουν αρνητικά τη διακύμανση των ρυθµών οικονοµικής ανάπτυξης. The common theme of my dissertation is how structural changes at the macroeconomic level affect economic growth and growth volatility. In particular my thesis focuses on the following three topics: In Chapter Two we investigate the univariate and the multivariate properties of key macroeconomic variables of the economy of Cyprus using state of the art statistical techniques that allow for structural breaks. In Chapter Three, we examine empirically if initial land inequality is an important determinant of take-off delays and long-run economic performance, while in Chapter Four, we uncover growth volatility regimes and identify their robust determinants. Chapter One includes a brief summary of the results derived from the above topics. It is undisputable the fact that the Cyprus economy, has been subject to a number of substantial internal and external shocks and thus, in Chapter Two we investigate the impact of these shocks on its main macroeconomic time series. We do so drawing upon the large econometric literature that has determined how best to consider exogenous and endogenous breaks in the context of unit root testing. We consider the short-run as well as the long-run relationship between variables in the presence of structural breaks. Our results indicate that the null hypothesis of a unit root cannot be rejected for any of the series examined. The structural breaks found coincide with important, known, policy changes as well as economic and political events. While the short-run inter-relationship among variables is greatly affected by these events, we do not discern long-run effects on these relationships. Recent work in the growth literature has provided various explanations for transition delays and the great divergence. Chapter Three provides empirical support for one theory of transition delays: initial land inequality. Our analysis is designed to elucidate the channels via which land inequality can affect long-run economic performance. Using a new historical data set for land inequality (Frankema (2009)) we employ duration analysis to investigate whether higher levels of land inequality lead to longer delays in the extension of primary schooling. We then investigate whether such delays affect long-run economic performance via their effect on contemporaneous schooling. Our findings suggest that land inequality is a key determinant of delays in schooling, and that such delays have a significant negative impact on long-run output. In Chapter Four we uncover growth volatility regimes and identify their robust determinants using a large international panel of countries. In doing so we propose a novel empirical methodology that allows us to simultaneously deal with model uncertainty, heterogeneity, and endogeneity by unifying two recent econometric techniques: Bayesian Model Averaging and Structural Threshold Regression (STR). We find robust evidence for multiple volatility regimes indexed by levels of initial income and public debt. We also find heterogeneous but negative effects of institutions and demography on volatility across regimes.
- Published
- 2012
20. Failure to Launch? The Role of Land Inequality in Transition Delays
- Author
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Kourtellos, Andros, Stylianou, Ioanna, Tan, Chih Ming, and Kourtellos, Andros [0000-0001-9662-0420]
- Subjects
model validation ,Economics and Econometrics ,jel:Z12 ,growth takeoffs, schooling, duration analysis, model uncertainty, institutions ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Affect (psychology) ,Growth takeoffs ,model test ,Empirical research ,jel:O40 ,Econometrics ,Economics ,Duration (project management) ,uncertainty analysis ,Schooling ,landownership ,media_common ,education ,Primary schooling ,Transition (fiction) ,transitional economy ,theoretical study ,economic growth ,jel:C59 ,Model uncertainty ,primary education ,Duration analysis ,growth takeoffs ,schooling ,duration analysis ,model uncertainty ,institutions ,Great Divergence ,Finance - Abstract
Recent work in the growth literature has provided various explanations for transition delays and the great divergence. This paper provides empirical support for one theory of transition delays: initial land inequality. Our analysis is designed to elucidate the channels via which land inequality can affect long-run economic performance. Using a new historical data set for land inequality (Frankema (2009)) we employ duration analysis to investigate whether higher levels of land inequality lead to longer delays in the extension of primary schooling. We then investigate whether such delays affect long-run economic performance via their effect on contemporaneous schooling. Our findings suggest that land inequality is a key determinant of delays in schooling, and that such delays have a significant negative impact on long-run output.
- Published
- 2012
21. Failure to launch? the role of land inequality in transition delays
- Author
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Kourtellos, Andros, Stylianou, Ioanna, Tan, Chih Ming, and Kourtellos, Andros [0000-0001-9662-0420]
- Published
- 2011
22. A small macroeconomic model of the Cyprus economy
- Author
-
Christofides, Louis N., Kourtellos, Andros, Stylianou, Ioanna, and Kourtellos, Andros [0000-0001-9662-0420]
- Subjects
Economic forecasting – Mathematical models ,Macroeconomics – Mathematical models ,Gross domestic product – Cyprus – Statistics ,Liquidity (Economics) ,Consumer price indexes – Cyprus - Published
- 2006
Catalog
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