6 resultados para Social Behaviour
em Repositório digital da Fundação Getúlio Vargas - FGV
Resumo:
Este estudo tem como objetivo verificar a influência dos jogos eletrônicos e do gênero sobre o comportamento social dos jovens da geração Y brasileira do ponto de vista da propensão a agir mais individualmente ou socialmente. E a forma como tal comportamento afeta os indivíduos no mercado de trabalho. Para atingir tal objetivo, além da bibliografia referente ao assunto foram utilizados dados de jovens brasileiros colhidos através de um questionário online. Ficou constatado, por meio da análise dos resultados, que o hábito de jogar não influencia o jovem a agir mais individualmente ou coletivamente. A internet e os jogos eletrônicos não interferiram nas atitudes da amostra pesquisada frente às relações de amizade, lealdade e ação coletiva. Porém, foi possível observar que o gênero dos jovens os faz terem comportamentos sociais diferentes.
Resumo:
Este trabalho objetivou analisar como três projetos de circo social, na cidade do Rio de Janeiro, afetaram a vida de jovens que deles participaram. Tentou-se analisar, utilizando-se a metodologia da História Oral, suas mudanças de comportamento, atitudes e hábitos, assim como seus aprendizados e sucessos. Como resultados, percebemos que o circo social representa uma importante ferramenta pedagógica de transformação e realização de objetivos, devido as suas características peculiares.
Resumo:
O pressuposto que a motivação influi no comportamento e a internalização é um fator de percepção de normas sugeriu esse tema: Motivação como fator de efetivação na percepção e cumprimento das normas de conduta social. Assim foi feito um trabalho de campo sobre características pessoais em estudantes do 2º grau e sua percepção quanto as normas de ética pública. Variáveis de personalidade e atitude foram inseridas através de 4 escalas. Foi elaborado e testado um questionário de ética pública tendo sua fidedignidade comprovada. O tratamento estatístico das Escalas x Questionário foi feito através da Regressão Múltipla. Os resultados mostraram que 2 das variáveis medidas (personalidade e atitude) obtiveram correlação significativa em relação as normas de ética pública.
Resumo:
This article develops a life-cycle general equilibrium model with heterogeneous agents who make choices of nondurables consumption, investment in homeowned housing and labour supply. Agents retire from an specific age and receive Social Security benefits which are dependant on average past earnings. The model is calibrated, numerically solved and is able to match stylized U.S. aggregate statistics and to generate average life-cycle profiles of its decision variables consistent with data and literature. We also conduct an exercise of complete elimination of the Social Security system and compare its results with the benchmark economy. The results enable us to emphasize the importance of endogenous labour supply and benefits for agents' consumption-smoothing behaviour.
Resumo:
Government transfers to individuals and families play a central role in the Brazilian social protection system, accounting for almost 14 per cent of GDP in 2009. While their fiscal and redistributive impacts have been widely studied, the macroeconomic effects of transfers are harder to ascertain. We constructed a Social Accounting Matrix (SAM) for 2009 and estimated short-term multipliers for seven different government monetary transfers . The SAM is a double-entry square matrix depicting all income flows in the economy. The data were compiled from the 2009 Brazilian National Accounts and the 2008/2009 POF, a household budget survey. Our SAM was disaggregated into 56 sectors, 110 commodities, 200 household groups and seven factors of production (capital plus six types of labor, according to schooling). Finally, we ran a set of regressions to separate household consumption into ‘autonomous’ (or ‘exogenous’) and ‘endogenous’ components. More specifically, we are interested in the effects of an exogenous injection into each of the seven government transfers outlined above. All the other accounts are thus endogenous. The so-called demand ‘leaks’ are income flows from the endogenous to exogenous accounts. Leaks—such as savings, taxes and imports—are crucial to determine the multiplier effect of an exogenous injection, as they allow the system to go back to equilibrium. The model assumes that supply is perfectly elastic to demand shocks. It assumes that the families’ propensity to save and consumption profile are fixed—that is, rising incomes do not provoke changes in behaviour. The multiplier effects of the on GDP corresponds to the growth in GDP resulting from each additional dollar injected into each transfer seven government transfers. If the government increased Bolsa Família expenditures by 1 per cent of GDP, overall economic activity would grow by 1.78 per cent, the highest effect. The Continuous Cash Benefit, comes second. Only three transfers— the private-sector and public servants’ pensions and FGTS withdrawals—had multipliers lower than unity. The multipliers for other relevant macroeconomic aggregates—household and total consumption, disposable income etc. —reveal a similar pattern. Thus, under the stringent assumptions of our model, we cannot reject the hypothesis that government transfers targeting poor households, such as the Bolsa Família, help foster economic expansion. Naturally, it should be stressed that the multipliers relate marginal injections into government transfers to short-term economic performance either real growth, or inflation if there is no idle capacity which is also useful to analyze. In the long term, there is no doubt that what truly matters is the growth of the country’s productive capacity.
Resumo:
Population ageing is a problem that countries will have to cope with within a few years. How would changes in the social security system affect individual behaviour? We develop a multi-sectoral life-cycle model with both retirement and occupational choices to evaluate what are the macroeconomic impacts of social security reforms. We calibrate the model to match 2011 Brazilian economy and perform a counterfactual exercise of the long-run impacts of a recently adopted reform. In 2013, the Brazilian government approximated the two segregated social security schemes, imposing a ceiling on public pensions. In the benchmark equilibrium, our modelling economy is able to reproduce the early retirement claiming, the agents' stationary distribution among sectors, as well as the social security deficit and the public job application decision. In the counterfactual exercise, we find a significant reduction of 55\% in the social security deficit, an increase of 1.94\% in capital-to-output ratio, with both output and capital growing, a delay in retirement claims of public workers and a modification in the structure of agents applying to the public sector job.