Publications des institutions partenaires

S'abonner aux flux infonet economy   7321 - 7340 of 8520

Anticompetitive Practices and Liberalising Markets in Latin America and the Caribbean

The last ten years have seen many Latin American and Caribbean nations enact or reform competition laws, and numerous other jurisdictions are considering following suit. The evidential base to guide such policymaking is, however, limited. In this paper we have assembled two databases, one concerning allegations of anti-competitive acts in newspaper articles and another concerning the...

Full Text

English / 01/07/2005

Sustainable Fiscal Policy in a Federal System: Switzerland as an Example

How a sustainable fiscal policy can be performed in a federal system is not only a Swiss problem but is also discussed in other federal countries like Germany and Austria, and in the European Union. Contrary to most other countries, the Swiss Fiscal system is characterised by an extensive fiscal federalism with high fiscal autonomy at all govermental levels, by direct popular rights...

Full Text

English / 01/07/2005

Reforming health care: Evidence from quantile regressions for counts

I consider the problem of estimating the effect of a health care reform on the frequency of individual
doctor visits when the reform effect is potentially different in different parts of the outcome distribution.
Quantile regression is a powerful method for studying such heterogeneous treatment effects. Only
recently has this method been extended to situations where...

Full Text

English / 22/06/2005

System Dynamics and the Evolution of the Systems Movement - A Historical Perspective

The purpose of this contribution is to give an overview of the role of System Dynamics in the context of the evolution of the systems movement. "Systems movement"--often referred to briefly as "systemics"--is a broad term, which takes account of the fact that
there is no one systems approach, but a range of different ones. Indeed, the development of the...

Full Text

English / 14/06/2005

Oxytocin increases trust in humans

Trust pervades human societies. Trust is indispensable in friendship, love, families and organizations, and plays a key role in economic exchange and politics. In the absence of trust among trading partners, market transactions break down. In the absence of trust in a country's institutions and leaders, political legitimacy breaks down. Much recent evidence indicates that trust...

Full Text

English / 02/06/2005

Discounting and altruism to future decision-makers

Is discounting of future decision-makers’ consumption utilities consistent with "pure" altruism toward those decision-makers, that is, a concern that they are better off according to their own, likewise forward-looking, preferences? It turns out that the answer is positive for many but not all discount functions used in the economics literature. In particular, "...

Full Text

English / 01/06/2005

The Hidden Costs of Control

In this paper we analyze the behavioral consequences of control on motivation. Wenstudy a simple experimental principal-agent game, where the principal decides whethernhe controls the agent by implementing a minimum performance requirement before the agent chooses a productive activity. Our main finding is that a principal's decisionnto control has a negative impact on the agent...

Full Text

English / 01/06/2005

Neuroeconomic Foundations of Trust and Social Preferences

This paper discusses recent neuroeconomic evidence related to other-regarding behaviors and the decision to trust in other people’s other-regarding behavior. This evidencensupports the view that people derive nonpecuniary utility (i) from mutual cooperation in socialndilemma (SD) games and (ii) from punishing unfair behavior. Thus, mutual cooperation and the punishment of free riders...

Full Text

English / 01/06/2005

The Neuroeconomics of Mind Reading and Empathy

"The most fundamental solution concepts in Game Theory – Nash equilibrium, backward induction, and iterated elimination of dominated strategies – are based on the assumption that people are capable of predicting others' actions. These concepts require people to be able to view the game from the other players’ perspectives, i.e. to understand others’ motives and beliefs....

Full Text

English / 01/06/2005

The Behavioral Effects of Minimum Wages

The prevailing labor market models assume that minimum wages do not affect the labor supply schedule. We challenge this view in this paper by showing experimentally that minimum wages have significant and lasting effects on subjects’ reservation wages. The temporary introduction of a minimum wage leads to a rise in subjects’ reservation wages which persists even after the minimum...

Full Text

English / 01/06/2005

Myopic Loss Aversion Revisited: The Effect of Probability Distortions in Choice Under Risk

When the performance of a risky asset is frequently assessed, the probability of detecting a loss is high, which averts the loss averse investors. This effect is known as myopic loss aversion (MLA). This paper reexamines several recent experimental studies documenting the existence of MLA. A closer look at the experimental data reveals that the effect of MLA is largely neutralized by...

Full Text

English / 01/06/2005

Dynamic Taylor Rules and the Predictability of Interest Rates

Recent research shows that when commonly estimated dynamic Taylor rules, which are augmented with a lagged interest, are embedded in a variety of macroeconomic models, they imply a greater amount of predictable information about future movements in interest rates than is actually evident in the yield curve. We extend the analysis to consider more generally the predictability of the...

Full Text

English / 01/06/2005

Is It Culture or Democracy? The Impact of Democracy, Income, and Culture on Happiness

We look at the relation between democracy and perceived subjective well-being, taking also into account the impact of income and culture. After briefly reviewing the empirical results for Switzerland, we re-estimate this relationship allowing for the relative income position of individuals and also using a new more recent data from the Swiss Household Panel. No...

Full Text

English / 01/06/2005

On the Rationality of the General Public

Using Allensbach survey data about how people look forward to the coming year, we construct true ex-post forecasts and compare them with the forecasts produced by the German Council of Economic Experts and by the Economic Research Institutes. Then we perform rationality tests for these forecast series. The Allensbach forecasts outperform the professional forecasts in many respects....

Full Text

English / 01/06/2005

The Parent Company Puzzle on the German Stock Market

In this paper, we investigate the German stock market with regard to "negative stub values" or "parent company puzzles". These are situations where a firm's market value is less than the value of its ownership stake in a publicly traded subsidiary. According to MITCHELL/PULVINO/STAFFORD (2002), negative stub values indicate clear arbitrage opportunities,...

Full Text

English / 01/06/2005

The Sisyphus syndrome in health revisited

Health care may be similar to Sisyphus work: When the task is about to be completed, work has to start all over again. To see the analogy, consider an initial decision to allocate more resources to health. The likely consequence is an increased number of survivors, who will exert additional demand for health care. With more resources allocated to health, the cycle starts over again....

Full Text

English / 23/05/2005

Entry liberalization and inequality in industrial performance

Industrial delicensing which began in 1985 in India marked a discrete break from a past of centrally planned industrial development. Similar liberalization episodes are taking place across the globe. We develop a simple Schumpeterian growth model to understand how firms respond to the entry threat imposed by liberalization. The model emphasises that firm responses, even within the...

Full Text

English / 01/05/2005

Pages

Le portail de l'information économique suisse

© 2016 Infonet Economy