45,779 research outputs found
Trade and Development in Vietnam: Exploring Investment Linkages
This paper presents and uses a new, stylized single country dynamic CGE model to explore the trade-development linkages in Vietnam. Application of this framework involves addressing three basic questions: 1. Does a model that properly determines capacity additions and more fully captures macroeconomic accounting and growth dynamics predict trade levels in a satisfactory manner? 2. Are those capacity additions determined by trade liberalization, and if so, which aspects of trade liberalization? 3. Under this framework what are expected impacts of trade liberalization initiatives, such as past bilateral trade agreements and recent WTO accession, taking into account their potential effect on incentives to invest via both tariff changes and institutional reforms? We also explore the role of the state in determining investment patterns, since the government of Vietnam has played a crucial role in setting both the aggregate level and sectoral pattern of investment in the past. But recently there has been a recovery of foreign investment as well as an upsurge of investment by the domestic private sector. Moreover, Vietnamâs WTO accession agreement was as much about incentives to FDI as it was about tariff concessions, and it spurred ongoing institutional reforms that impact the investment climate.trade, development, Vietman, investment linkages
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Aggregation and the Role of Trusted Third Parties in SME E-Business Engagement: A Regional Policy Issue
YesIt is against the background of low engagement by SMEs in e-business that this paper seeks to highlight the potential importance of aggregation and of the role of trusted third parties in facilitating higher levels of involvement. The paper is based on an ongoing SME e-business research programme and reports on some recent research on SMEs that were using high complexity e-business applications and explores the extent to which the research findings could address the core concern of low engagement. This qualitative case study based research includes analysis of data collected from 13 community intermediaries, acting as trusted third parties. It concludes that the role of community intermediaries appears to be central to the adoption of critical e-aggregation applications provided by service providers. For policymakers, this important role of critical e-aggregation applications in facilitating e-business engagement by SMEs has emerged as part of this research but there is limited evidence of policy initiatives that reflect this
From service-oriented architecture to service-oriented enterprise
Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) was originally motivated by enterprise demands for better business-technology alignment and higher flexibility and reuse. SOA evolved from an initial set of ideas and principles to Web services (WS) standards now widely accepted by industry. The next phase of SOA development is concerned with a scalable, reliable and secure infrastructure based on these standards, and guidelines, methods and techniques for developing and maintaining service delivery in dynamic enterprise settings. In this paper we discuss the principles and main elements of SOA. We then present an overview of WS standards. And finally we come back to the original motivation for SOA, and how these can be realized
Gambling and the use of credit: an individual and household level analysis
We explore the relationship between gambling and other forms of risk-taking behaviour, i.e. exposure to debt and the use of credit, at the individual and household level using representative pooled cross-section data drawn from the UK Expenditure and Food Surveys (EFS), 2001 to 2007. Gambling and the use of credit are shown to be positively correlated at the household level. While both the incidence and amount of gambling vary according to household income, the positive association between gambling and the use of credit is remarkably stable across household income. In addition to our household level analysis, we also explore the prevalence of intra-household gambling, which has attracted relatively limited attention in the existing literature. It is apparent that there is strong intra-household correlation in both gambling activity and in the use of credit, with somewhat stronger relationships in lower income households
Automating SLA-Driven API Development with SLA4OAI
The OpenAPI Specification (OAS) is the de facto standard
to describe RESTful APIs from a functional perspective. OAS has been
a success due to its simple model and the wide ecosystem of tools supporting the SLA-Driven API development lifecycle. Unfortunately, the
current OAS scope ignores crucial information for an API such as its
Service Level Agreement (SLA). Therefore, in terms of description and
management of non-functional information, the disadvantages of not having a standard include the vendor lock-in and prevent the ecosystem to
grow and handle extra functional aspects.
In this paper, we present SLA4OAI, pioneering in extending OAS not
only allowing the specification of SLAs, but also supporting some stages
of the SLA-Driven API lifecycle with an open-source ecosystem. Finally,
we validate our proposal having modeled 5488 limitations in 148 plans
of 35 real-world APIs and show an initial interest from the industry with
600 and 1900 downloads and installs of the SLA Instrumentation Library
and the SLA Engine.Ministerio de EconomĂa y Competitividad TIN2015-70560-RMinisterio de Ciencia, InnovaciĂłn y Universidades RTI2018-101204-B-C21Ministerio de EducaciĂłn, Cultura y Deporte FPU15/0298
Political Institutions, Policymaking, and Economic Policy in Latin America
This paper surveys selected themes in the political economy of policymaking in Latin America, with an emphasis on recent research focusing on actual decision and implementation processes, and on the political institutions and state and social actors involved in those processes. In particular, the paper addresses how political rules work for or against intertemporal cooperation among political actors. The document shows that the extent to which polities obtain the key policy features that seem to determine development depends on the workings of political institutions, which define how the policymaking game is played, on the characteristics of the arenas of interaction, which define where the policymaking game is played, and on certain characteristics of key socioeconomic groups, which define who interacts with professionalpoliticians in pursuing different policy preferences.Political institutions, Public policies, Economic policy, Government capabilities, Development, Latin America
Competitive Assessments for HAP Delivery of Mobile Services in Emerging Countries
In recent years, network deployment based on High Altitude Platforms (HAPs)
has gained momentum through several initiatives where air vehicles and
telecommunications payloads have been adapted and refined, resulting in more
efficient and less expensive platforms. In this paper, we study HAP as an
alternative or complementary fast-evolving technology to provide mobile
services in rural areas of emerging countries, where business models need to be
carefully tailored to the reality of their related markets. In these large
areas with low user density, mobile services uptake is likely to be slowed by a
service profitability which is in turn limited by a relatively low average
revenue per user. Through three architectures enabling different business roles
and using different terrestrial, HAP and satellite backhaul solutions, we
devise how to use in an efficient and profitable fashion these multi-purpose
aerial platforms, in complement to existing access and backhauling satellite or
terrestrial technologies
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Municipal Aggregation and Retail Competition in the Ohio Energy Sector
We study incumbency advantage in a dynamic game with incomplete information between an incumbent and a voter. The incumbent knows the true state of the world, e.g., the severity of an economic recession or the level of criminal activities, and can choose the quality of his policy. This quality and the state of the world determine the policy outcome, i.e., the economic growth rate or the number of crimes committed. The voter only observes the policy outcome and then decides whether to reelect the incumbent or not. Her preferences are such that she would reelect the incumbent under full information if and only if the state of the world is above a given threshold level. In equilibrium, the incumbent is reelected in more states of the world than he would be under full information. In particular, he chooses inefficient policies and generates mediocre policy outcomes whenever the voter's induced belief distribution will be such that her expected utility of reelecting the incumbent exceeds her expected utility of electing the opposition candidate. Hence, there is an incumbency advantage through inefficient policies. We provide empirical evidence consistent with the prediction that reelection concerns may induce incumbents to generate mediocre outcomes
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