28,492 research outputs found

    The Determinants of Network Growth: The Case of Commercial Online Information Networks

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    With the advent of modern telecommunications capabilities, networks are rapidly becoming a competitive necessity in a wide variety of industries. The literature on networks suggests that networks have characteristics (e.g., network externalities) not shared by many other products or services, and thus traditional explanations of product growth or diffusion may not apply. Because there have been few empirical studies on networks, little is known about how networks grow and compete in the marketplace and the impact of network externalities. Using commercial online information networks as a context, this research examines the determinants of network growth. We find that make effect, usability, and compatibility with the dominant technological architecture are important variables influencing network growth. The results are also weakly supportive of the network externalities hypothesis, i.e., the online services industry exhibits some extent of network externalities

    Whither Capitalism? Financial externalities and crisis

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    As with global warming, so with financial crises – externalities have a lot to answer for. We look at three of them. First the financial accelerator due to ‘fire sales’ of collateral assets -- a form of pecuniary externality that leads to liquidity being undervalued. Second the ‘risk- shifting’ behaviour of highly-levered financial institutions who keep the upside of risky investment while passing the downside to others thanks to limited liability. Finally, the network externality where the structure of the financial industry helps propagate shocks around the system unless this is checked by some form of circuit breaker, or ‘ring-fence’. The contrast between crisis-induced Great Recession and its aftermath of slow growth in the West and the rapid - and (so far) sustained - growth in the East suggests that successful economic progress may depend on how well these externalities are managed

    How emergence conditions of technological clusters affect their viability? Theoretical perspectives on cluster lifecycles

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    The widely studied concept of clusters has been usually treated as pre-established and successful structures. We argue that clusters are not pre-established but emerge through a double competition process of technological and regional nature. Moreover, faced to a changing environment they are not always successful. Their long-term evolution depends on their viability capacities. We show that viability is dependent on the emergence conditions, because different forms of emergence create clusters with different structures.cluster life cycle, emergence, viability, networks

    Knowledge, networks of cities and growth in regional urban systems: theory, measurement and policy implications

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    The objective of this paper is to measure the impact of different kinds of knowledge and external economies on the urban growth in an intraregional network of cities. The paper is divided in five sections. First section (theoretical framework) exposes the relation between the knowledge-based city, networks of cities, external economies and urban growth. Second section exposes a methodology for the measurement of knowledge in cities and the identification of knowledge-based networks of cities. Third section exposes a model to measure the effects of knowledge and external economies (static and dynamic) on the urban growth. Fourth section applies this model to a case study (Catalonia). Finally, conclusions and policy implications are exposed. Keywords: knowledge-based city, networks of cities, urban growth, external economies, spatial econometrics. JEL: R11, R12, O3

    Sources of Competitiveness in Tourist Local Systems

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    At the end of the XIX Century, Marshall described the existence of some concentrations of small and medium enterprises specialised in a specific production activity in certain districts of some industrial English cities. Starting from his contribute, Italian scholars have paid particular attention to this local system of production coined by Marshall under the term industrial district. In other countries, different but related territorial models have played a central role as the milieu or the geographical industrial clusters. Recently, these models have been extended to non-industrial fields like culture, rural activities and tourism. In this text, we explore the extension of these territorial models to the study of tourist activities in Italy, using a framework that can be easily applied to other countries or regions. The paper is divided in five sections. In the first one, we propose a review of the territorial models applied to tourism industry. In the second part, we construct a tourist filiere and we apply a methodology for the identification of local systems through GIS tools. Thus, taxonomy of the Italian Tourist Local Systems is presented. In the third part, we discuss about the sources of competitiveness of these Tourist Local Systems. In the forth section, we test a spatial econometrics model regarding different kinds of Italian Tourist Local Systems (rural systems, arts cities, tourist districts) in order to measure external economies and territorial networks. Finally, conclusions and policy implications are exposed.Tourism and travel industry, industrial districts theory, regional and local development, external economies, spatial econometrics.

    Identification of Network Externalities in Markets for Non-Durables

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    This paper introduces a structural econometric model of consumer demand for non-durable goods, which exhibits network externalities. The structural model allows us to identify the parameters, which determine the strength of the externalities in the underlying economic model from the empirical estimation results. The estimates of these parameters can then be employed to test the economic significance of the externalities and the compatibility of networks. The identifying assumption that drives our results is that consumers care about the lagged instead of the current network size. We argue that it does not necessarily bound their rationality. To complete our structural model, we provide an example of functional specification that yields a simple linear stochastic model of demand. Using this functional specification, we identify all structural parameters of the model. In the end, the estimation and the stochastic structure of the resulting econometric model are discussed. ZUSAMMENFASSUNG - ( Identifikation der Netzwerkeffekten in den Märkten für nicht-dauerhafte Güter) Der vorliegende Beitrag stellt ein strukturelles ökonometrisches Modell der Konsumnachfrage für nicht-dauerhafte Güter mit externen Netzwerkeffekten vor. Das strukturelle Modell lässt uns die Parameter von Netzwerkeffekten im zugrunde liegenden ökonomischen Modell empirisch zu identifizieren. Die Schätzer der Strukturparameter könnten für das Testen der Netzwerkkompatibilität und der ökonomischen Signifikanz der Netzwerkeffekte verwendet werden. Für die Identifikation nehmen wir an, dass die Konsumenten die Netzwerksgröße verzögert wahrnehmen. Wir argumentieren, dass diese Annahme nicht notwendigerweise mit irrationalem Verhalten gleichzusetzen ist. Um das strukturelle Modell zu vollständigen, geben wir eine funktionale Spezifikation, aus der ein lineares stochastisches Nachfragemodell folgt. Unter Verwendung dieser Spezifikation sind alle Strukturparameter von dem Modell identifiziert. Zum Schluss diskutieren wir die Schätzung und die stochastische Struktur des sich ergebenden ökonometrischen Modells.Structural Econometric Model, Network Externalities, Innovation Diffusion

    Sources of Competitiveness in Tourist Local Systems

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    At the end of the XIX Century, Marshall described the existence of some concentrations of small and medium enterprises specialised in a specific production activity in certain districts of some industrial English cities. Starting from his contribute, Italian scholars have paid particular attention to this local system of production coined by Marshall under the term “industrial district”. In other countries, different but related territorial models have played a central role as the “milieu” or the “geographical industrial clusters”. Recently, these models have been extended to non-industrial fields like culture, rural activities and tourism. In this text, we explore the extension of these territorial models to the study of tourist activities in Italy, using a framework that can be easily applied to other countries or regions. The paper is divided in five sections. In the first one, we propose a review of the territorial models applied to tourism industry. In the second part, we construct a tourist filiere and we apply a methodology for the identification of local systems through GIS tools. Thus, taxonomy of the Italian Tourist Local Systems is presented. In the third part, we discuss about the sources of competitiveness of these Tourist Local Systems. In the forth section, we test a spatial econometrics model regarding different kinds of Italian Tourist Local Systems (rural systems, arts cities, tourist districts) in order to measure external economies and territorial networks. Finally, conclusions and policy implications are exposed.

    Knowledge and Information Economy, Welfare and governance: the economic nature of Intellectual Property Rights

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    В даній статті аналізуються підходи до оцінки економічної природи інтелектуальної власності та її використання з урахуванням економічної категорії благополуччя. Зокрема в статті доведено, що транзакційні витрати використання нематеріальних активів, зокрема прав інтелектуальної вартості значно перевищують витрати пов’язні на їх державне регулювання. Ефективність державного регулювання (ліцензування, обмеження, контроль, власність держави) значно перевищує витрати на переговори між контрагентами по впровадженню інтелектуальних прав власності. В дослідженнях «неокласиків» по просуванню інтелектуальних прав власності враховуються лише витрати на виробництво, проте транзакційні витрати ринкових механізмів не беруться до уваги. В роботі доведено, що підходи неокласичної економічної школи не можуть використовуватися для оцінки таких комплексних товарів як нематеріальні активи. Теоретичні результати дослідження полягають в тому, що приватні переговори та ринкова ефективність використання прав інтелектуальної власності не можуть бути досягнуті без інституціонального втручання, тобто без державного регулювання, необхідного для підтримки умов соціальної справедливості. Проблема забезпечення ефективності функціонування інтелектуальних прав власності полягає не лише в урахуванні виробничих витрат, а навпаки, необхідно брати до уваги транзакційні та колективні витрати. Враховуючи всю комплексність нематеріального капіталу в роботі показано обмеження теорії Коуза та обґрунтовано її відмінності з теорією Вільямсона для нематеріальних активів. Зокрема, що стосується теорії Коуза, доведено необхідність використання інституціонального посередника та регулятора для досягнення соціальної та ринкової ефективності. Ринкові механізми довели свою низьку ефективність при регулюванні та функціонуванні такої категорії благ як нематеріальні активи. В висновках можна стверджувати, що для інтелектуальних прав власності приватні переговори та ринкові механізми просування зазначених категорій товарів не забезпечують бажаний соціальний ефект, основною причиною ринкових провалів можна назвати специфіку та комплексність нематеріальних активів, неповноту та асиметричність інформації. Проведений аналіз може бути використаний в різних сферах пов’язаних з нематеріальними активами: просування товарів екологічної спрямованості, культурні товари, освітні послуги, виробництво інформації, економіка Інтернету. При цитуванні документа, використовуйте посилання http://essuir.sumdu.edu.ua/handle/123456789/9144This paper will study the different conceptions about economic nature of (Intelectual) Property Rights, and the implications in regard to Welfare. This analysis may be applied in various fields concerned with intangible components: ecology, cultural goods, knowledge and information production, internet economics, for example. In regard to the complexity of these types of intangible capital, I will show the limits of the private negotiation inspired in Coase´s approach, and underline the opposition between this approach and the Williamson´s one. При цитировании документа, используйте ссылку http://essuir.sumdu.edu.ua/handle/123456789/914

    Knowledge, networks of cities and growth in regional urban systems

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    The objective of this paper is to measure the impact of different kinds of knowledge and external economies on urban growth in an intraregional context. The main hypothesis is that knowledge leads to growth, and that this knowledge is related to the existence of agglomeration and network externalities in cities. We develop a three-stage methodology: first, we measure the amount and growth of knowledge in cities using the OCDE (2003) classification and employment data; second, we identify the spatial structure of the area of analysis (networks of cities); third, we combine the Glaeser - Henderson - De Lucio models with spatial econometric specifications in order to contrast the existence of spatially static (agglomeration) and spatially dynamic (network) external economies in an urban growth model. Results suggest that higher growth rates are associated to higher levels of technology and knowledge. The growth of the different kinds of knowledge is related to local and spatial factors (agglomeration and network externalities) and each knowledge intensity shows a particular response to these factors. These results have implications for policy design, since we can forecast and intervene on local knowledge development paths.Knowledge city, networks of cities, urban growth, external economies, spatial econometrics.
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