3 resultados para Economic Studies

em Doria (National Library of Finland DSpace Services) - National Library of Finland, Finland


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The economic importance of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and entrepreneurship has increased significantly in recent decades and entrepreneurial activity and SMEs are deemed vital to economic progress. Therefore, it is justifiable to study how small firms and entrepreneurs can enhance their performance and emergence in the turbulent economic environment. The concept of entrepreneurial orientation (EO) has recently attracted considerable attention in the field of entrepreneurship research. EO generally refers to a firm’s propensity to be innovative, to be proactive and to take risks. A majority of EO studies so far have found that adopting EO associated entrepreneurial behaviors will help firms to create or sustain a high level of performance. This dissertation explores the main drivers and performance implications of EO for SMEs in time of economic crisis. Hence the first objective of this dissertation is to examine the performance implications of EO and to test the role of EO on how firms are treated by the crisis at operative level. The second objective is to expand the prevailing understanding of determinants of EO by exploring the relationship between owner's work related values, attitudes, demographic characteristics, firm’s financial resources and EO. EO was found to be a significant and positive factor behind a firm’s long run growth. Hence it can be said that EO has positive implications for firm performance. But on the other hand, during a time of economic crisis the different dimensions of EO had both positive and negative effects on performance of SMEs. The performance implications varied across different stages of the crisis and were also dependent on what measure was used for measuring the performance. The main drivers of EO in SMEs were the personal work related values of the entrepreneur and his/her prior experience as an entrepreneur. The intrinsic work values related to interest, responsibility, challenge, self-development or intellectual stimulation and values related to status, power, achievement and recognition had a positive effect on the level of EO. On the other hand, extrinsic values related to high income, material possessions, benefits such as generous holidays, job security, and comfort through good working conditions decreased the level of EO

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Psoriasis may cause a substantial economic burden to patients, health service providers, third parties, and the society as a whole. However, all of these costs may not be adequately considered when assessing the treatment costs for psoriasis. Psoriasis may negatively affect work productivity as psoriasis has a relatively high incidence in working age people that lead to possible costs because of lost productivity. The aims of this thesis were to estimate the economic burden of psoriasis particularly from patients’ and health service providers’ perspectives and to estimate the background factors (e.g., severity of psoriasis) that may have led to high costs. Another aim was to estimate the total medication costs and to estimate psoriasis’ proportion of health-related productivity losses. The patient sample was based on patients with psoriasis who visited the Department of Dermatology in Turku University Hospital during a one-year study period. These patients were sent a questionnaire. From the patients who gave consent, medication information, clinical information, and number of visits to Turku University Hospital were collected. This data was linked to the information from the questionnaire. Overall psoriasis was estimated to cause a substantial economic burden for the patient, health service provider, health insurance system, employer, and the society as a whole. The direct costs represented only a small proportion of the overall financial burden of psoriasis, whereas indirect costs were significant. The estimated annual costs for patients and employers were almost twice the costs to health service providers or the Social Insurance Institution of Finland. In conclusion, the cost contribution of patients and employers should be considered when assessing the costs of different treatments, in addition to commonly studied direct costs of medications and costs to health service providers. Methods used to assess these costs should be well justified and be described clearly to allow comparisons between studies and to evaluate the quality of the results.

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This study explores variegated means through which ports have become increasingly entangled in the planning logic of neoliberal innovation-driven economy. The research topic belongs to the academic disciplines of economics and human geography. The aim of the thesis is to analyse how the notion of innovation, adopted in a variety of supranational and national port policy documents, is deployed in operational port environment in two different ports of the Baltic Sea Region: the port of Stockholm, Sweden, and the port of Klaipeda, Lithuania. This novel innovation agenda is visible in several topics I examine in the study, that is, port governance, environmental issues, and seaport – port-city interface. The gathered primary source material on port policy documents, strategies, development planning documents and reports is analysed by utilizing the qualitative content analysis research method. Moreover, the empirical part of the case study, that is, tracing innovation practices in mundane port activities is based on collected qualitative semi-structured interviews with port authorities in Klaipeda and Stockholm, researchers and other port experts. I examine the interview material by employing the theoretical reading research method. In my analysis, I have reframed port-related policy development by tracing and identifying the port transformation from “functional terminals” to “engines for growth”. My results show that this novel innovation-oriented rhetoric imprinted in the narrative “engines for growth” is often contested in daily port practices. In other words, my analysis reveals that the port authorities’ and other port actors’ attitudes towards innovations do not necessarily correspond to the new narrative of innovation and do not always “fit” within a framework of neoliberal economic thinking that glorifies the “culture of innovations”. I argue that the ability to develop innovative initiatives in the ports of Klaipeda and Stockholm is strongly predetermined by local conditions, a port’s governance model, the way port actors perceive the importance of innovations per se, demand factors and new regulations.