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Displaying Results 201 - 225 of 2667 on page 9 of 107
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Understanding the economics of land access in Ireland
(2018)
Geoghegan, Cathal
Understanding the economics of land access in Ireland
(2018)
Geoghegan, Cathal
Abstract:
This thesis analyses land availability and mobility in Ireland. The thesis begins with an overview of the economic theory of agricultural land markets followed by a description of Ireland’s current land use structures and barriers to land use change. A farm microsimulation model is then developed which allows one to consider the effect of taxation policy at a farm level. The microsimulation model is used to compare financial returns from a range of agricultural land uses in order to examine the effect of policy instruments on land mobility. The analysis finds that in numerous scenarios, leasing out agricultural land on a long-term basis can prove more profitable than farming the land. Attitudes amongst Irish farmers toward land mobility and openness to various forms of land transaction are also examined. The analysis is based on a nationally representative survey of 846 Irish farmers. The results show that farmer attitudes significantly affect openness to land mobility. Factors su...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/7256
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Peaks and Troughs: Economics and Political Economy of Central Bank Independence Cycles
(2019)
Romelli, Davide; Masciandaro, Donato
Peaks and Troughs: Economics and Political Economy of Central Bank Independence Cycles
(2019)
Romelli, Davide; Masciandaro, Donato
Abstract:
This chapter investigates the endogenous evolution of central bank institutional design over the past four decades. From a theoretical perspective, it employs a stylized political economy model to highlight some key determinants of the level of central bank independence as a function of macroeconomic shocks and political economy characteristics of countries. It then employs recently developed dynamic indices of central bank design to describe the evolution of central bank independence over the period 1972?2014. In a sample of sixty-five countries, it shows that the increasing trend in central bank independence during 1972?2007 has been reversing after the 2008 financial crisis, mainly due to significant changes to the roles of central banks in banking supervision. The authors find that this evolution can be related to several macroeconomic shocks, such as inflationary, fiscal, and exchange-rate shocks.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/90173
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The Economic Consequences of Despair
(2014)
Pecchenino, Rowena A.
The Economic Consequences of Despair
(2014)
Pecchenino, Rowena A.
Abstract:
This paper examines despair from the perspectives of many disciplines to define despair and to characterize the despairing individual, his motivations, and his capacity for decision-making. Two models incorporating despair as a key element are then proposed. Using these models as a framework, the economics literature is examined to determine the extent to which economics has, at least implicitly, recognized despair, without necessarily confronting it either in theory or policy design, and argue why this failure has weakened both our theory and our policy. The paper concludes with the suggestions that economics can and, perhaps, should incorporate despair, narrowly, and economic agents’ emotional state, generally, into its theoretical and policy analyses.
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/5497/
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Reader engagement in English, French and Spanish economics research articles: Contrasting questions in a comparable corpus of academic writing
(2020)
Curry, Niall
Reader engagement in English, French and Spanish economics research articles: Contrasting questions in a comparable corpus of academic writing
(2020)
Curry, Niall
Abstract:
The aim of this thesis is to identify correspondences in questions used to engage readers in English, French, and Spanish economics research articles. Contrastive approaches to academic discourse occupy a small but growing space in the literature; however, the focus is typically on two languages. Moreover, most research in academic discourse has focussed on the English language, with relatively very little research available on questions as reader engagement devices in French and Spanish academic writing. This thesis asks to what extent the presence and functions of questions as reader engagement correspond in English, French, and Spanish economics research articles. Taking a corpusbased contrastive analysis approach, this thesis merges theories of contrastive linguistics and corpus linguistics to develop a framework of analysis that ensures effective comparability across academic languages. The corpus-based contrastive analysis approach is applied to the study of questions in the E...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/9241
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The measurement of child costs : evidence from Ireland
(2010)
Bargain, Olivier; Gbakou, Monnet; Donni, Olivier
The measurement of child costs : evidence from Ireland
(2010)
Bargain, Olivier; Gbakou, Monnet; Donni, Olivier
Abstract:
We apply an extension of the Rothbarth approach to estimate the share of household resources accruing to children (i.e., the cost of children) in Ireland. The method also allows us to identify the economies of scale in the household and indifference scales in Lewbel (2003)'s sense. A practical aspect of the present approach is that it does not require price variation. The identi cation of the children's share requires the observation of adult-speci c goods as in the traditional Rothbarth method. We compare our fi ndings to previous results for Ireland.
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/2631
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The measurement of child costs : a Rothbarth-type method consistent with scale economies
(2010)
Bargain, Olivier; Donni, Olivier
The measurement of child costs : a Rothbarth-type method consistent with scale economies
(2010)
Bargain, Olivier; Donni, Olivier
Abstract:
We propose a new methodology to estimate the share of household income accruing to children (i.e., the cost of children). Following the principle of the Rothbarth approach, the identi cation of the children's share requires the observation of at least one adult-speci c good. However, our method differs from this traditional approach in that it allows measuring economies of scale in the household and indifference scales in Lewbel (2003)'s sense. We illustrate the method with an application on the French Household Budget Survey.
Not applicable
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/2632
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The economics and psychology of inequality and human development
(2010)
Cunha, Flavio; Heckman, James J.
The economics and psychology of inequality and human development
(2010)
Cunha, Flavio; Heckman, James J.
Abstract:
Paper presented as the Marshall Lecture at the European Economics Association, Milan, August 29, 2008
Recent research on the economics of human development deepens understanding of the origins of inequality and excellence. It draws on and contributes to personality psychology and the psychology of human development. Inequalities in family environments and investments in children are substantial. They causally affect the development of capabilities. Both cognitive and noncognitive capabilities determine success in life but to varying degrees for different outcomes. An empirically determined technology of capability formation reveals that capabilities are self-productive and cross-fertilizing and can be enhanced by investment. Investments in capabilities are relatively more productive at some stages of a child's life cycle than others. Optimal child investment strategies differ depending on target outcomes of interest and on the nature of adversity in a child's early yea...
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/1848
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Explaining regional consumption in the UK
(2010)
Muellbauer, John; Murphy, Anthony
Explaining regional consumption in the UK
(2010)
Muellbauer, John; Murphy, Anthony
Abstract:
Joseph Rowntree Foundation
A hard copy is available in UCD Library at GEN 330.08 IR/UNI
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/1770
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Solving the 'consumption puzzle'? : a general to specific approach
(2009)
Rodney, Thom
Solving the 'consumption puzzle'? : a general to specific approach
(2009)
Rodney, Thom
Abstract:
A hard copy is available in UCD Library at GEN 330.08 IR/UNI
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/1682
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Neo-Keynesian macroeconomics in an open economy : a survey : part 1
(2009)
Neary, J. Peter
Neo-Keynesian macroeconomics in an open economy : a survey : part 1
(2009)
Neary, J. Peter
Abstract:
The original photocopying quality of this item renders some text unreadable. A hard copy is available in UCD Library at GEN 330.08 IR/UNI
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/1429
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Financial market contagion
(2008)
Kelly, Morgan
Financial market contagion
(2008)
Kelly, Morgan
Abstract:
The power of the metaphor of contagion—that beliefs, actions, and strategies spread among economic agents like pathogens among biological organisms— causes it to recur in disparate areas of economics. This article focusses on four applications of contagion to economics: social influence or memoryless learning; Bayesian social learning; strategy choice in coordination games; and the spread of crises in international financial markets.
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/524
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The effects of geography on innovation in small to medium sized enterprises in the South-East and South-West of Ireland
(2009)
Doran, Justin; Jordan, Declan; O'Leary, Eoin
The effects of geography on innovation in small to medium sized enterprises in the South-East and South-West of Ireland
(2009)
Doran, Justin; Jordan, Declan; O'Leary, Eoin
Abstract:
This paper analyses the effects of geography on innovation by small and medium sized enterprises in the South-West and South-East regions of Ireland. Using an augmented innovation production function it estimates, both directly and indirectly, the effects of interaction with geographically proximate external agents and agglomeration economies on product and process innovation in these enterprises. The findings question the premise that geography matters for innovation in the Irish case. There is little evidence that local/regional interaction is more important for innovation and the close availability of a skilled labour pool and a range of urbanization indicators have no effect.
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/760
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The Role of Decision-Making Biases in Ireland's Banking Crisis
(2011)
LUNN, PETE
The Role of Decision-Making Biases in Ireland's Banking Crisis
(2011)
LUNN, PETE
Abstract:
This paper considers Ireland's banking crisis from the perspective of behavioural economics. It assesses whether known biases in judgement and decision-making were instrumental in the development and severity of the crisis. It investigates evidence that key decision-makers, including consumers, businesspeople, bankers and regulators, as well as parties such as civil servants, politicians, academics and journalists, were influenced by seven specific phenomena which have been identified previously via experiments and field studies. It concludes that evidence is consistent with the influence of these established phenomena. Ireland's long boom, rapid financial integration and lack of relevant past experience may have increased the vulnerability of decision-makers to economic and financial reasoning that proved disadvantageous. The analysis has potential implications for attempts to prevent future crises.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/56169
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Social Networks and the national art gallery (Dublin|...|Sofia)
(2010)
MAC an AIRCHINNIGH, MICHEAL
Social Networks and the national art gallery (Dublin|...|Sofia)
(2010)
MAC an AIRCHINNIGH, MICHEAL
Abstract:
To publish is to make public. And one sense of being public is surely to be accessible? Today it is not only the writing and the images that are published formally, that is to say through official channels, but also the casual human artefacts, the chat, the blog, the quick pic, the self-made music and dance and film, and all of the latter through the medium of the social network. In the World-Wide Web (WWW), to be published is to have a unique resource identifier (URI) and usually a unique resource locator (URL). But to be visibly published on the WWW one needs to be found (much in the same way that one might be found say, 200 years ago, through the library catalogue). Hence at the very core of electronic publishing is to be found the metadata nucleus. In olden times the scholar/reader would have to travel to that place, the Library, if it were accessible, to read/study the work. Today, (s)he travels electronically to those places which are accessible. E-publication does not necessa...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/39172
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Introduction to the Special Issue
(2006)
Neary, J. Peter
Introduction to the Special Issue
(2006)
Neary, J. Peter
Abstract:
Brendan Walsh retired in May 2005 from the Chair of Applied Economics and the National Economics of Ireland which he had held at University College Dublin since 1980. During that time his academic and popular writings confirmed his position as a scholar of international renown and the foremost commentator on the Irish economy. To mark his retirement and to celebrate his achievements, a conference was held at University College Dublin on October 7 2005, at which papers were presented by his former students and colleagues on a wide range of topics relating to the Irish and world economies. This issue of The Economic and Social Review contains the edited proceedings of the conference.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/61916
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Towards an aggregate production function for Irish agriculture
(1978)
O'Rourke, A.Desmond
Towards an aggregate production function for Irish agriculture
(1978)
O'Rourke, A.Desmond
Abstract:
Much research effort has been expended in other countries in generating measures of the aggregate production function for the agricultural sector as a means of examining technological relationships between inputs and outputs, substitutability between inputs, economies of scale, optimum resource use, optimum growth paths, etc. Only one such effort has been published for Irish agriculture, that by Rasmussen with Sandilands (1962), which used data from the 1955-58 National Farm Surveys. Unfortunately, Rasmussen's study, published in 1962, pre-dated the emergence of the agricultural economics profession as a potent influence on Irish agricultural policy. (For example, the first issue of the Irish Journal of Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology appeared only in 1967.) The small body of agricultural economic researchers were forced to devote most of their attention to specific farm management and commodity marketing problems. Accordingly, there has been no attempt to develop a ...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/68846
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Influences and outcomes of outsourcing: Insights from the telecommunications industry
(2014)
Marshall, Donna; McIvor, Ronan; Lamming, Richard
Influences and outcomes of outsourcing: Insights from the telecommunications industry
(2014)
Marshall, Donna; McIvor, Ronan; Lamming, Richard
Abstract:
This paper presents findings from an analysis of the experiences of three telecommunications companies that have embarked upon extensive outsourcing. Transaction cost economics and the resource-based view were used to derive a theoretical framework to determine the key influences on the outsourcing process and the outsourcing outcomes in the three case companies. The findings have shown that those companies that developed collaborative relationships with their suppliers achieved higher levels of success with outsourcing. The findings challenge some of the prescriptions of transaction cost economics in relation to outsourcing, particularly in the area of inter-organisational collaboration. The findings have also challenged the value of the core/non-core logic as a basis for outsourcing. Furthermore, the research has identified the influence of political motivations on outsourcing as an important area for further research.
Economic Social Research Council
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/5967
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Proposing a formalised model for mindful information systems offshoring
(2011)
Costello, Gabriel; Donnelan, Brian
Proposing a formalised model for mindful information systems offshoring
(2011)
Costello, Gabriel; Donnelan, Brian
Abstract:
The central thesis of this paper is that Mathematical Economics can provide a novel approach to the examination of offshoring business decisions and provide an impetus for future research in the area. A growing body of research indicates that projected cost savings from IT offshoring projects are not being met. Furthermore, evidence suggests that decision-making processes have been more emotional than rational, and that many offshoring arrangements have been rushed into without adequate analysis of the true costs involved. Building on the concept of mindfulness and mindlessness introduced to the IS literature by Swanson and Ramiller, a cost equation is developed using ¿deductive reasoning rather than inductive study¿ in the tradition of mathematical economics. The model endeavours to capture a wide range of both the quantitative and qualitative parameters. Although the economic model is illustrated against the background of a European scenario, the theoretical framework is generic a...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/1571
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Varieties of Mathematics in Economics
(2009)
Velupillai, K. Vela
Varieties of Mathematics in Economics
(2009)
Velupillai, K. Vela
Abstract:
Real analysis, founded on the Zermelo-Fraenkel axioms, buttressed by the axiom of choice, is the dominant variety of mathematics utilized in the formalization of economic theory. The accident of history that led to this dominance is not inevitable, especially in an age when the digital computer seems to be ubiquitous in research, teaching and learning. At least three other varieties of mathematics have come to be used in the formalization of mathematics in more recent years. These other varieties, I claim, are more consistent with the intrinsic nature and ontology of economic concepts. In this paper I discuss aspects of the way real analysis dominates the mathematical formalizations of economic theory and the prospects for overcoming this dominance.
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/328
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Production of Commodities by Means of Commodities in a Mathematical Mode
(2010)
Velupillai, K. Vela
Production of Commodities by Means of Commodities in a Mathematical Mode
(2010)
Velupillai, K. Vela
Abstract:
The claim in this paper is that Sraffa employed a rigorous logic of mathematical reasoning in his book, Production of Commodities by Means of Commodities (PCC), in such a mode that all existence proofs were constructive. This is the kind of mathematics that was prevalent at the beginning of the 19th century, which was dominated by the concrete, the constructive and the algorithmic. It is, therefore, completely consistent with the economics of the 19th century, which was the fulcrum around which the economics of PCC is centred.
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/1073
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Kaldor on Debreu: The Critique of General Equilibrium Reconsidered
(2009)
Boylan, Thomas A.; O Gorman, Paschal F.
Kaldor on Debreu: The Critique of General Equilibrium Reconsidered
(2009)
Boylan, Thomas A.; O Gorman, Paschal F.
Abstract:
This paper revisits Kaldor's methodological critique of orthodox economics. The main target of his critique was the theory of general equilibrium as expounded in the work of Debreu and others. Kaldor deemed this theory to be seriously flawed as an empirically adequate description of real-world economies. According to Kaldor, scientific progress was not possible in economics without a major act of demolition, by which he meant the destruction of the basic conceptual framework of the theory of general equilibrium. We extend Kaldor's critique by recourse to major developments in 20th century philosophy of mathematics, and then go on to demonstrate that Debreu's work, based as it is on Bourbakist formalism and in particular Cantorian set theory, is conceptually incompatible with Kaldor¿s requirements for an empirical science. This aspect of Kaldor¿s critique has not been explored, and as a consequence a major source of substantiating his critique has remained undeveloped.
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/326
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Examining the dynamical transition in the Dow Jones Industrial Index from Bull to Bear market using Recurrence Quantification Analysis
(2012)
Moloney, Kitty; Raghavendra, Srinivas
Examining the dynamical transition in the Dow Jones Industrial Index from Bull to Bear market using Recurrence Quantification Analysis
(2012)
Moloney, Kitty; Raghavendra, Srinivas
Abstract:
We present evidence of phase transitions (periodic to chaotic and chaotic to chaotic) in the Dow Jones Industrial Index as it transitions from Bull to Bear market. There is also evidence of a completely unpredictable (i.e., nondeterministic) regime just as the market peaks. The noisy trader theory is suggested as the economic explanation for this unpredictability i.e. rational but uninformed traders chase noise rather than the usual macro economic and financial variables. We suggest that the collapse in determinism allows the dynamics of the market to break from the past and that the market is in fact piecewise deterministic. A principal component series is developed and named the random market indicator, (RMI). This can be used to indicate when the market is transitioning. The RMI indicator could be used by market participants, financial regulators and policy makers as an indicator of market crisis. During times of crises, quantitative risk estimation techniques such as stationary ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/3063
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Proposing a formalised model for mindful information systems offshoring.
(2010)
Costello, Gabriel J.; Coughlan, Chris; Donnellan, Brian; Gadatsch, Andreas
Proposing a formalised model for mindful information systems offshoring.
(2010)
Costello, Gabriel J.; Coughlan, Chris; Donnellan, Brian; Gadatsch, Andreas
Abstract:
The central thesis of this paper is that Mathematical Economics can provide a novel approach to the examination of offshoring business decisions and provide an impetus for future research in the area. A growing body of research indicates that projected cost savings from IT offshoring projects are not being met. Furthermore, evidence suggests that decision-making processes have been more emotional than rational, and that many offshoring arrangements have been rushed into without adequate analysis of the true costs involved. Building on the concept of mindfulness and mindlessness introduced to the IS literature by Swanson and Ramiller, a cost equation is developed using “deductive reasoning rather than inductive study” in the tradition of mathematical economics. The model endeavours to capture a wide range of both the quantitative and qualitative parameters. Although the economic model is illustrated against the background of a European scenario, the theoretical framework is generic a...
http://hdl.handle.net/10759/582547
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Mark
Cross sectoral differences in the drivers of innovation: Evidence from the Irish community innovation survey
(2012)
Doran, Justin; Jordan, Declan
Cross sectoral differences in the drivers of innovation: Evidence from the Irish community innovation survey
(2012)
Doran, Justin; Jordan, Declan
Abstract:
This paper analyses differences across sectors in firms’ propensity to innovate and the relative importance of inputs to innovation classifying firms into four broad sectors. The propensity and drivers of four types of innovation (new to firm, new to market, process and organisational) within these sectors are then analysed. The results indicate that, for new to firm and new to market innovation, there is a strong degree of heterogeneity in the drivers of innovation across sectors. The propensity to introduce process or organisational innovations varies slightly across sectors but that there is no evidence of differences across sectors in the drivers of innovation. These results have important implications for policy instruments to meet the needs of targeted firms.
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/2435
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The Pragmatics of Economics Experts’ Engagement With Non-Specialists
(2016)
O'Rourke, Brendan; Maesse, Jens
The Pragmatics of Economics Experts’ Engagement With Non-Specialists
(2016)
O'Rourke, Brendan; Maesse, Jens
Abstract:
A Call for Papers for Panel on Economics and Language Use: The pragmatics of economics experts’ engagement with non-specialists, 15th International Pragmatics Conference (IPrA2017) to be held in Belfast, Northern Ireland, 16-21 July 2017.
https://arrow.dit.ie/buschmaroth/15
Displaying Results 201 - 225 of 2667 on page 9 of 107
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