29,615 research outputs found
IT governance maturity patterns in Portuguese healthcare
The pervasive use of technology in organizations to address the increased services complexity
has created a critical dependency on information technology (IT) that calls to a specific focus on
IT Governance (ITG). However, determining the right ITG mechanisms remains a complex
endeavor. This paper uses Design Science Research and proposes an exploratory research by
analyzing ITG case studies to elicit possible ITG mechanisms patterns. Six interviews were
performed in Portuguese healthcare services organizations to assess the ITG practices. Our goal
is to build some theories (ITG mechanisms patterns), which we believe will guide healthcare
services organizations about the advisable ITG mechanisms given their specific context. We also
intend to elicit conclusions regarding the most relevant ITG mechanisms for Portuguese
healthcare services organizations. Additionally, a comparison is made with the financial industry
to identify improvement opportunities. We finish our work with limitations, contribution and
future work.info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio
Do Low Cost Carriers Have Different Corporate Governance Models?
In this paper, we investigate whether different business models in the same industry (passenger air transportation) lead to different corporate governance models. We found that low cost carriers (LCCs) organise their boards differently from full service carriers (FSCs), in order to achieve lower costs and the faster decision-making process that is required by their business model. We also found that LCCs and FSCs solve their potential agency cost problems differently. FSCs have more board committees in order to monitor management, and LCSs have a closer coincidence of interests between shareholders and management.corporate governance, low cost carriers
TOWARDS A COMPETITIVE LOW-CARBON ECONOMY: ON FIRMSâ INCENTIVES AND THE ROLE OF PUBLIC RESEARCH
This paper considers the prerequisites for implementing a competitive low-carbon economy in the European Union from the point of view of firmsâ incentives, the role of policy and the contribution of public research. It suggests that the reduction of the environmental impact of energy can be a new competitiveness factor. Rather than being treated as a constraint and cost-aggravating factor, addressing climate change can offer economic opportunity and contribute to growth. The paper looks at both static (energy efficiency) and dynamic (innovation â new products, processes, technologies or sectors and consumption patterns) dimensions of competitiveness.Economic competitiveness; low-carbon economy; energy; technology; and public research.
Regional Convergence in Portugal: Policy Impacts (1990-2001)
In this study we look at whether the seven Portuguese NUTS II regions have been able to share equally in the countryâs overall growth or whether there have been asymmetries and divergences in their growth patterns. We assess the regional impact of a wide range of Portuguese domestic policies on cohesion. We focus mainly on regional economic cohesion, although social cohesion effects are also considered. As in the case of Portugal structural operations within the community framework programmes and national efforts were highly intertwined, we also contrast the impact of Community policies in two regions.Portugal, European Union, Regional Convergence, Cohesion, National Policies, Structural Funds, Institutions.
Mutual fund flowsâ performance reaction: does convexity apply to small markets?
In this paper we study the performance reaction of investors in a small market context. Instead of the asymmetrical investorsâ reaction to winners and losers, as usually documented for the US, an absence of risk-adjusted performance reaction was observed. The absence of reaction can be attributed to either lower investor sophistication, conflicts of interests in the context of the Portuguese universal banking industry, or the existence of relevant back-end load cost which prevent investors from reacting. A high persistence of net investment flows was also noted. Our results are consistent with the idea that the financial groups with larger market shares have the capacity âto driveâ their customers to funds with larger fees. This practice emerges as a non-transparent means of increasing prices.Mutual Funds, Performance Reaction, Investor Behaviour, Small Markets and Regulation
Eureka and beyond: mining's impact on African urbanisation
This collection brings separate literatures on mining and urbanisation together at a time when both artisanal and large-scale mining are expanding in many African economies. While much has been written about contestation over land and mineral rights, the impact of mining on settlement, notably its catalytic and fluctuating effects on migration and urban growth, has been largely ignored. African nation-statesâ urbanisation trends have shown considerable variation over the past half century. The current surge in ânewâ mining countries and the slow-down in âoldâ mining countries are generating some remarkable settlement patterns and welfare outcomes. Presently, the African continent is a laboratory of national mining experiences. This special issue on African mining and urbanisation encompasses a wide cross-section of country case studies: beginning with the historical experiences of mining in Southern Africa (South Africa, Zambia, Zimbabwe), followed by more recent mineralizing trends in comparatively new mineral-producing countries (Tanzania) and an established West African gold producer (Ghana), before turning to the influence of conflict minerals (Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Sierra Leone)
Embedding the 'new economy' in Europe : a study in the institutional specificities of knowledge-based growth
Aspirations for a 'new economy' currently feature prominently in the economic policy debate within the EU. So pronounced is elite interest in the 'new economy' that the issue of knowledge-based growth dominated the Special European Council organized for Lisbon in May 2000. However, the Presidential Conclusions to that Council failed to address the question of whether the European economy is institutionally compatible with knowledge-based growth. The 'new economy' is currently most developed within the United States, and the institutional specificities of the American high-tech sector suggest that it may be impossible simply to import the 'new economy' into Europe. The EU may lack both the labour market and the capital market conditions necessary for successfully embedding the 'new economy' in Europe
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