112,251 research outputs found

    Stability, Specialization and Social Recognition

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    Yang s theory of economic specialization under increasing returns to scale (Yang 2001) is a formal development of the fundamental Smith-Young theorem on the extent of the market and the social division of labor.In this theory specialization and, thus, the social division of labor is firmly embedded within a system of perfectly competitive markets.This leaves unresolved whether and how such development processes are possible in economies based on more primitive, nonmarket organizations.In this paper we introduce a general relational model of economic interaction.Within this non-market environment we discuss the emergence of economic specialization and ultimately of economic trade and a social division of labor.We base our approach on three stages in organizational development: the presence of a stable relational structure; the presence of relational trust and subjective specialization; and, finally, the emergence of objective specialization through the social recognition of subjectively defined economic rolesnetworks;stability;social division of labor;specialization

    International Demonstration Effect and Domestic Division of Labour: A Simple Model

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    The implications of the international demonstration effect (IDE) for the development of underdeveloped economies have long been studied and debated. Yet few formal analyses exist in the literature, especially regarding its implications for the growth of domestic markets and the division of labour in developing economies. We offer an analysis of endogenous specialization under IDE, the first of its kind, showing that, far more complicated than the scenario held by conventional wisdom, IDE makes more difficult the emergence of the market underpinning the domestic division of labour, but facilitates the expansion of the market once the market has been developed.External habit formation; specialization and division of labour; international demonstration effect; economic development; emergence and extent of the market.

    Specialization and Regulation: The Rise of Professionals and the Emergence of Occupational Licensing Regulation

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    This paper explores the origins and effects of occupational licensing regulation in late nineteenth and early twentieth century America. Was licensing regulation introduced to limit competition in the market for professional services at the expense of efficiency? Or was licensing adopted to reduce informational asymmetries about professional quality? To investigate these hypotheses, we analyze the determinants of licensing legislation and the effect of licensing on entry into eleven occupations. We also examine the impact of medical licensing laws on entry into the medical profession, physician earnings, mortality rates, and the incidence of medical malpractice. We believe that, at least for the Progressive Era, the evidence is more consistent with the asymmetric information hypothesis than the industry capture hypothesis.

    The Emergence of Rural Artistic Havens: A First Look

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    Nearly all applied research on arts activity has examined phenomena in metropolitan areas. Findings from this past research confirm an arts specialization in a limited number of cities. This paper finds a similar pattern in nonmetropolitan areas, where a limited number of counties maintain or develop a distinct specialization in the arts. We document the emergence of these "rural artistic havens" and identify county characteristics associated with the attraction of performing, fine, and applied artists. The implications of these findings for rural development strategies focusing on the arts are discussed.arts activity, built amenities, creative class, logistic regression, natural amenities, tourism development, Community/Rural/Urban Development,

    Division of Labor, Transaction Cost, Emergence of the Firm and Firm Size

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    In this paper a general equilibrium model is constructed to explain the emergence of firms and change in firm size by the tradeoff between economies of specialization and transaction cost. We show that firms emerge from the development of division of labor if the transaction efficiency for labor is smaller than that for intermediate goods. Given the emergence of firms, change in the average size of firms (average employment) will depend on the change in transaction efficiency for intermediate goods relative to that for labor. If the transaction efficiency is improved in such a way that the transaction efficiency for intermediate goods becomes higher than that for labor, average employment will decrease. We present evidence showing that it is not uncommon that average employment declines as the economy develops. The general equilibrium model provides an explanation for the concurrent increase of productivity and decrease in average employment which is observed in a number of countries. Models based on economies of scale instead of economies of specialization would have yielded the opposite prediction.irrelevance of size of the firm, division of labor, theory of the firm

    The emergence of specialization in heterogeneous artificial agent populations

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    In this dissertation, I present the Weight-Allocated Social Pressure System (WASPS). WASPS is a computational framework that when applied, can allow for the increase in agent specialization within a multi-agent population. Research has shown that specialization can lead to an overall increase in the productivity levels within a population [55]. WASPS aims to provide a mix of features from existing frameworks such as the genetic threshold and social inhibition models. It also subsumes these models, and allows hybrids of them to be created. It provides individual level behaviour as found in the genetic threshold model. As in some variations of the genetic threshold model [49], WASPS also allows for individual level learning. As found in the social inhibition models, WASPS allows for social influence, or population level learning. Unlike some models, WASPS allows agents to self-organize based on available tasks. In addition, it makes allowances for agents to allocate a resource among multiple tasks during a work period, wherein most models allow the selection of only one task. WASPS allows the assumption that agents are heterogeneous in their task performance aptitudes. It thus aims to create skill-based agent specialization within the population. This will allow more skilled agents to allocate more resources to tasks for which they have comparative advantages over their competition. Because WASPS is self-organizing, it can handle the addition and removal of agents from social networks, as well as changes in the connections between agents. WASPS does not limit the definition of many or its parameters, which allows it to deal with changing definitions for those parameters. For example, WASPS can easily adjust to deal with changing definitions of agent skill and influence. In fact, the individual level learning can be implemented in such a way that an agent can self-optimize even when it has no competitors to influence it

    ROLE OF TRAINING IN THE KNOWLEDGE SOCIETY

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    Today we are witnessing an excessive introduction of nanotechnologies in our lives which brings a number of benefits, the elimination of communication barriers between people, freedom of movement to the acquisition by them of routine activities as well as the emergence of new needs would need continuous training to keep up with them and to reap the full benefits of potential. Division of labor and specialization in the entrepreneurs, the emergence and widespread quality standards, professionalism, teamwork, accountability are just some of the reasons that lead us to believe that, at present, although the activities are generated by individual needs, these cannot be satisfied entirely by a single entity called the individual, household, business or civil societyTraining, Public Services, eLearning, Knowledge Society

    From early Curiosity to space wide web: The emergence of the small satellite innovation ecosystem

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    Innovation ecosystems have gained significant scholarly and managerial attention. Much of the literature focuses on established ecosystems, and the limited research that examines ecosystem emergence does not dig deeper into the dynamics and challenges during the process of emergence. With a focus on the transition from birth to growth of an ecosystem, this paper fills this important gap by systematically examining how a nascent ecosystem develops into a thriving one. Employing a conceptualized composition approach, we conduct an in-depth qualitative study on the emergence of the modern small satellite ecosystem from 1981 to 2017. Our case analysis demonstrates a dynamic process through which a seed innovation gradually grows into a thriving ecosystem without a centralized sponsor. We explicate how tensions arise within an evolving ecosystem and how forces hindering specialization delay the emergence process. We then develop a process model of ecosystem emergence to conceptualize how actors gradually become specialized, how their specialization decisions coevolve with the ecosystem value proposition, and how tensions get resolved through a complex and iterative process. We contribute to the literature by advancing an evolutionary view of ecosystem emergence with an in-depth analysis of the transition from birth to growth of an ecosystem

    Lateralized neural responses to letters and digits in first graders.

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    The emergence of visual cortex specialization for culturally acquired characters like letters and digits, both arbitrary shapes related to specific cognitive domains, is yet unclear. Here, 20 young children (6.12 years old) were tested with a frequency-tagging paradigm coupled with electroencephalogram recordings to assess discrimination responses of letters from digits and vice-versa. One category of stimuli (e.g., letters) was periodically inserted (1/5) in streams of the other category (e.g., digits) presented at a fast rate (6 Hz). Results show clear right-lateralized discrimination responses at 6 Hz/5 for digits within letters, and a trend for left-lateralization for letters. These results support an early developmental emergence of ventral occipito-temporal cortex specialization for visual recognition of digits and letters, potentially in relation with relevant coactivated brain networks

    Scale, Scope, and Specialization Effects on Retailers’ Procurement Strategies: Evidence from the Fresh Produce Markets of São Paulo

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    Worldwide, the emergence of large supermarket chains in food retail markets is often associated with the marginalization of smaller retailers. A notable exception exists in Brazil, however, where small retailers have held their place in the market and recently even gained ground. The literature investigating how retail concentration has affected agrifood chains has focused activities of the largest retail chains, implicitly holding the scale, scope and specialization of retailers’ input needs constant, and overlooking the influence of these factors on retailers’ procurement strategies. This paper tests hypotheses regarding these variables’ effects on retailers’ fresh produce procurement strategies. Data is drawn from a survey of retailers in metropolitan São Paulo. The research results provide insight into factors underlying retailers’ procurement strategy choices and tradeoffs among options. The results support the fundamental hypothesis of the paper that research on the competitive strategies of smaller retailers in a context of market domination by large retailers should not focus exclusively on the degree to which the smaller retailers imitate the larger retailers rather it should account for the possibility that the underlying characteristics of the retailers may make diverse competitive strategies appropriate.scale, scope, specialization, procurement strategy, fresh produce, retail, Political Economy, L22,
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