802 resultados para Capital levy
Resumo:
There is a general presumption in the literature and among policymakers that immigrant remittances play the same role in economic development as foreign direct investment and other capital flows, but this is an open question. We develop a model of remittances based on the economics of the family that implies that remittances are not profit-driven, but are compensatory transfers, and should have a negative correlation with GDP growth. This is in contrast to the positive correlation of profit-driven capital flows with GDP growth. We test this implication of our model using a new panel data set on remittances and find a robust negative correlation between remittances and GDP growth. This indicates that remittances may not be intended to serve as a source of capital for economic development. © 2005 International Monetary Fund.
Resumo:
We provide evidence that college graduation plays a direct role in revealing ability to the labor market. Using the NLSY79, our results suggest that ability is observed nearly perfectly for college graduates, but is revealed to the labor market more gradually for high school graduates. Consequently, from the beginning of their careers, college graduates are paid in accordance with their own ability, while the wages of high school graduates are initially unrelated to their own ability. This view of ability revelation in the labor market has considerable power in explaining racial differences in wages, education, and returns to ability.
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Credit scores are the most widely used instruments to assess whether or not a person is a financial risk. Credit scoring has been so successful that it has expanded beyond lending and into our everyday lives, even to inform how insurers evaluate our health. The pervasive application of credit scoring has outpaced knowledge about why credit scores are such useful indicators of individual behavior. Here we test if the same factors that lead to poor credit scores also lead to poor health. Following the Dunedin (New Zealand) Longitudinal Study cohort of 1,037 study members, we examined the association between credit scores and cardiovascular disease risk and the underlying factors that account for this association. We find that credit scores are negatively correlated with cardiovascular disease risk. Variation in household income was not sufficient to account for this association. Rather, individual differences in human capital factors—educational attainment, cognitive ability, and self-control—predicted both credit scores and cardiovascular disease risk and accounted for ∼45% of the correlation between credit scores and cardiovascular disease risk. Tracing human capital factors back to their childhood antecedents revealed that the characteristic attitudes, behaviors, and competencies children develop in their first decade of life account for a significant portion (∼22%) of the link between credit scores and cardiovascular disease risk at midlife. We discuss the implications of these findings for policy debates about data privacy, financial literacy, and early childhood interventions.
Resumo:
El sector agroalimentario se ha convertido en el de mayor importancia durante los 90 para la economía argentina junto a los sectores del petróleo y acero. Sin embargo, el gran empuje proveniente del 'campo' no se traslada al resto de redes de abatecimiento de alimentos. El desarrollo veloz de las interrelaciones comerciales que conducen al establecimiento de distintas formas de relaciones para el abastecimiento de alimentos es un fenómeno clave en las economías agroalimentarias modernas. Los principales actores de las cadenas agroindustriales deben diseñar las mejores opciones respecto del diseño de sus relaciones comerciales. El objetivo principal del siguiente trabajo es identificar al capital social como un factor de producción para el desarrolo de los sistemas de agronegocios argentinos. Los objetivos específicos serán identificar el nivel de capital social del sistema de ganados y carnes vacuna, del sistema avícola y del sistema vitivinícola de la Argentina. El trabajo determina que el desarrollo global de los agronegocios en Argentina depende del grado de enforcement de la ley y los contratos y del nivel de acción colectiva. Dentro de las variables estudiadas 'confianza', 'acción colectiva' y 'cooperación y ética' presenta altos niveles en las tres variables, el sistema vitivinícola medios y el sistema de ganados y carnes vacuno los presenta bajos. El sistema de negocios avícola es la que marca un mayor desarrollo de capital social a lo largo de la muestra. El nivel de confianza expresado por sus miembros demuestra su capacidad para resolver los dilemas que presenta la acción colectiva en el negocio real, contrariamente al sistema vacuno, mientras que el sistema vitivinícola se coloca en una posición media. El sistema avícola presenta mayor cantidad de contratos formales y como vimos un mayor respeto por su cumplimiento más allá de la incompltitud de los mismos. La falta de contratos formales y la falta de control por parte del Estado, en mayor medida en el subsector vacuno por sobre el vitivinícola, favorece el doble estándar impositivo, comercial y sanitario (no en el caso del vino). En tal sentido, el no respeto por el conjunto de reglas de conducta formales (leyes, tradiciones, costumbres, sistema de valores, religiones, tendencias sociológicas, etc.), es decir las instituciones, que facilitan la coordinación o rigen las relaciones entre individuos o grupos, le agrega mayor incertidumbre a la interacción humana
Resumo:
El sector agroalimentario se ha convertido en el de mayor importancia durante los 90 para la economía argentina junto a los sectores del petróleo y acero. Sin embargo, el gran empuje proveniente del 'campo' no se traslada al resto de redes de abatecimiento de alimentos. El desarrollo veloz de las interrelaciones comerciales que conducen al establecimiento de distintas formas de relaciones para el abastecimiento de alimentos es un fenómeno clave en las economías agroalimentarias modernas. Los principales actores de las cadenas agroindustriales deben diseñar las mejores opciones respecto del diseño de sus relaciones comerciales. El objetivo principal del siguiente trabajo es identificar al capital social como un factor de producción para el desarrolo de los sistemas de agronegocios argentinos. Los objetivos específicos serán identificar el nivel de capital social del sistema de ganados y carnes vacuna, del sistema avícola y del sistema vitivinícola de la Argentina. El trabajo determina que el desarrollo global de los agronegocios en Argentina depende del grado de enforcement de la ley y los contratos y del nivel de acción colectiva. Dentro de las variables estudiadas 'confianza', 'acción colectiva' y 'cooperación y ética' presenta altos niveles en las tres variables, el sistema vitivinícola medios y el sistema de ganados y carnes vacuno los presenta bajos. El sistema de negocios avícola es la que marca un mayor desarrollo de capital social a lo largo de la muestra. El nivel de confianza expresado por sus miembros demuestra su capacidad para resolver los dilemas que presenta la acción colectiva en el negocio real, contrariamente al sistema vacuno, mientras que el sistema vitivinícola se coloca en una posición media. El sistema avícola presenta mayor cantidad de contratos formales y como vimos un mayor respeto por su cumplimiento más allá de la incompltitud de los mismos. La falta de contratos formales y la falta de control por parte del Estado, en mayor medida en el subsector vacuno por sobre el vitivinícola, favorece el doble estándar impositivo, comercial y sanitario (no en el caso del vino). En tal sentido, el no respeto por el conjunto de reglas de conducta formales (leyes, tradiciones, costumbres, sistema de valores, religiones, tendencias sociológicas, etc.), es decir las instituciones, que facilitan la coordinación o rigen las relaciones entre individuos o grupos, le agrega mayor incertidumbre a la interacción humana
Resumo:
p.187-200
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This paper investigates the determinants of capital structure for a sample of 20,713 unlisted firms from 11 eastern European countries over the period 1994-2004. We employ usual firm-specific financial variables as well as country-specific variables that describe the degrees of governance structure and financial development of each country. Using regression analysis, our results indicate that firm ownership concentration and country governance structure are insignificant explanatory variables to the degree of leverage of the firms in our sample. On the other hand, indicators of country financial development are robust determinants of capital structure. However, the marginal explanatory power of country-specific variables is small. We conclude that firm-specific characteristics are decisive in capital structure.
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It is an open question how animals find food in dynamic natural environments where they possess little or no knowledge of where resources are located. Foraging theory predicts that in environments with sparsely distributed target resources, where forager knowledge about resources’ locations is incomplete, Lévy flight movements optimize the success of random searches. However, the putative success of Lévy foraging has been demonstrated only in model simulations. Here, we use high-temporal-resolution Global Positioning System (GPS) tracking of wandering (Diomedea exulans) and black-browed albatrosses (Thalassarche melanophrys) with simultaneous recording of prey captures, to show that both species exhibit Lévy and Brownian movement patterns. We find that total prey masses captured by wandering albatrosses during Lévy movements exceed daily energy requirements by nearly fourfold, and approached yields by Brownian movements in other habitats. These results, together with our reanalysis of previously published albatross data, overturn the notion that albatrosses do not exhibit Lévy patterns during foraging, and demonstrate that Lévy flights of predators in dynamic natural environments present a beneficial alternative strategy to simple, spatially intensive behaviors. Our findings add support to the possibility that biological Lévy flight may have naturally evolved as a search strategy in response to sparse resources and scant information.
Resumo:
Theatre is a cultural and artistic form that involves a process of communication between creators and is received in a space and time located in the public sphere, which has meant that, over the centuries, it has acted as a space for expression, exchange and debate regarding all manner of ideas, causes and struggles. Implicit within this process are processes of expression, creation and reception, by way of which people demonstrate, analyse and question ways of seeing and understanding life, and ways of being and existing in the world. This gives rise to educational, cultural, social and political potential, which has been endorsed in numerous studies and investigations. In this work, in which theoretical orientation is established through a review of the relevant literature, we consider different intersections that occur between theatre and social work in order to also show that dramatic and theatrical expression offers substantive methodologies for achieving some objectives of social work, particularly in areas such as critical literacy, reflexivity and recognition, awareness raising, social participation, personal and/or community development, ownership of cultural capital and access to personal and social wellbeing.