426 resultados para Winner’s Curse
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Caption in Michigan Alumnus: Nine women, selected from among 272 applicants, have received $1,500 merit scholarships from the University's Center for the Continuing Education of Women. Seven of the nine are pictured here. Seated (left to right) are Marilyn Leese, Jane Wolfe, Carol Taylor, Susan Stokes and Kay Bauman. Standing (left to right) are Edith Withey and Carolyn Houser.
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Back Row: Fowler, Wait, Perry, Stone, Emerson
Middle row: Voorheis, Kellogg, Harpham
Front Row: Dew, Conger
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Goldsmiths'-Kress no. 30543.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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On cover:-Duncombe's acting edition, of the British theatre, 467.
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Bibliography: p. 413-416.
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No more published?
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Concert Program
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This essay is about two threats to society. One is to the environment that, if unattended, will endanger our way of life. The other is to constitutional government and to the economy that arises from ill-advised responses to the challenges of environmental protection. The latter threat, if unaddressed, will not only endanger our way of life by diminishing freedom and prosperity but, in the end, will also defeat our good intentions about the environment. [Executive summary extract]
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This paper examines the recent history of the Hungarian energy trading market in a co-evolutionary framework. Hungary is characterized by a mixed ownership structure with mainly multinational incumbents in energy retail and distribution, while the wholesale is dominantly owned by state-owned companies. The legal framework also has dual characteristics, with free-market regulation for industrial consumers and a regulated price regime for households. Our research method follows a longitudinal approach from the period of market liberalization in 2008 until 2013. We identified strong relationship between the individual and sector performance of the trading companies and the current political ideology and institutional regime.
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There are conflicting predictions in the literature about the relationship between FDI and entrepreneurship. This paper explores how foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows, measured by lagged cross-border mergers and acquisitions (M&A), affect entrepreneurial entry in the host economy. We have constructed a micro-panel of more than two thousand individuals in each of seventy countries, 2000–2009, linked to FDI by matching sectors. We find the relationship between FDI inflows and domestic entrepreneurship to be negative across all economies. This negative effect is much more pronounced in developed than developing economies and is also identified within industries, notably in manufacturing. Policies to encourage FDI via M&A need to consider how to counteract the prevailing adverse effect on domestic entrepreneurship.
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Illinois State Water Survey