205 research outputs found

    Global Networks of Trade and Bits

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    Considerable efforts have been made in recent years to produce detailed topologies of the Internet. Although Internet topology data have been brought to the attention of a wide and somewhat diverse audience of scholars, so far they have been overlooked by economists. In this paper, we suggest that such data could be effectively treated as a proxy to characterize the size of the "digital economy" at country level and outsourcing: thus, we analyse the topological structure of the network of trade in digital services (trade in bits) and compare it with that of the more traditional flow of manufactured goods across countries. To perform meaningful comparisons across networks with different characteristics, we define a stochastic benchmark for the number of connections among each country-pair, based on hypergeometric distribution. Original data are thus filtered by means of different thresholds, so that we only focus on the strongest links, i.e., statistically significant links. We find that trade in bits displays a sparser and less hierarchical network structure, which is more similar to trade in high-skill manufactured goods than total trade. Lastly, distance plays a more prominent role in shaping the network of international trade in physical goods than trade in digital services.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figure

    Performance of Indian Manufacturing in the Post Reform Period

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    Many emerging countries in recent decades have relied on a development strategy that focused primarily on promoting the manufacturing sector and the exports of manufactured goods. However, an acceleration of growth of output and employment in manufacturing has eluded India. This is despite the fact that the central focus of the reforms in the 1980s and 1990s was to unshackle the manufacturing sector. Instead it is the services sector which has grown rapidly, contributing about two-third of GDP growth in recent years. This paper discusses the reasons behind the modest performance of the manufacturing sector in India post reforms. It argues that there are many factors that have inhibited the growth of industrial sector in India. One major factor is the rigid and strict labor laws which have affected the industrial performance in a number of ways, by keeping the size of the establishments small, by not encouraging the production of labor intensive goods, by pushing activities to the unorganized sector, and by keeping the Indian industry uncompetitive. Besides the labor laws other factors that are responsible for the modest performance of the manufacturing sector include difficulty in the acquisition of land for industrial use, inadequate financing and infrastructure, and cumbersome business climate. The paper presents arguments and evidence which shows the importance of these factors

    Коллизионная система Западного Прибайкалья: аэрокосмическая геологическая карта Ольхонского региона (Байкал, Россия)

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    We announce the second edition of the Aerospace geological map of the Olkhon Region (Baikal, Russia), scale 1:40 000, which was published in 2017. The map has been considerably revised and updated, and its changes are critical for correct understanding of the regional geology, tectonics and geodynamics. Only a small number of its printed copies have been released, and therefore the map may not be available for all interested specialists. The electronic version of the map is available for studying and/or printing (see the link to its pdf file in the paper’s supplement). The pdf file is about 68 MB, i.e. small compared to the original map (more than 5 GB), but the quality is maintained. The map does not show the base layer due to the terms of the licenses owned by the companies and satellite owners.Настоящее краткое сообщение является в значительной степени анонсом второго издания Аэрокосмической геологической карты Ольхонского региона (Байкал, Россия) м-ба 1:40000, изданной в 2017 г. Изменения по сравнению с первым изданием карты весьма значительны и принципиально важны для понимания геологии, тектоники и геодинамики региона. Карта отпечатана небольшим тиражом, поэтому вряд ли будет доступна всем заинтересованным специалистам. В статье же приводится ссылка на электронный вариант карты (pdf-файл), размещенный в дополнительных материалах к статье на сайте журнала, который можно изучать или распечатывать для пользования. Размер электронного варианта файла карты (около 68 Мб) невелик по сравнению с оригиналом (более 5 Гб), однако потери качества нет, из него только удален базовый слой по условиям лицензий, полученных от компаний и владельцев спутников

    Physicians' attitudes about obesity and their associations with competency and specialty: A cross-sectional study

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Physicians frequently report negative attitudes about obesity which is thought to affect patient care. However, little is known about how attitudes toward treating obese patients are formed. We conducted a cross-sectional survey of physicians in order to better characterize their attitudes and explore the relationships among attitudes, perceived competency in obesity care, including report of weight loss in patients, and other key physician, training, and practice characteristics.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We surveyed all 399 physicians from internal medicine, pediatrics, and psychiatry specialties at one institution regarding obesity care attitudes, competency, including physician report of percent of their patients who lose weight. We performed a factor analysis on the attitude items and used hierarchical regression analysis to explore the degree to which competency, reported weight loss, physician, training and practice characteristics explained the variance in each attitude factor.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The overall response rate was 63%. More than 40% of physicians had a negative reaction towards obese patients, 56% felt qualified to treat obesity, and 46% felt successful in this realm. The factor analysis revealed 4 factors–<it>Physician Discomfort/Bias, Physician Success/Self Efficacy, Positive Outcome Expectancy</it>, and <it>Negative Outcome Expectancy</it>. Competency and reported percent of patients who lose weight were most strongly associated with the <it>Physician Success/Self Efficacy </it>attitude factor. Greater skill in patient assessment was associated with less <it>Physician Discomfort/Bias</it>. Training characteristics were associated with outcome expectancies with newer physicians reporting more positive treatment expectancies. Pediatric faculty was more positive and psychiatry faculty less negative in their treatment expectancies than internal medicine faculty.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Physician attitudes towards obesity are associated with competency, specialty, and years since postgraduate training. Further study is necessary to determine the direction of influence and to explore the impact of these attitudes on patient care.</p

    Employment generation by small firms in Spain

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    Despite the relevance in terms of policy, we still know little in Spain about where and by whom jobs are created, and how that is affecting the size distribution of firms. The main innovation of this paper is to use a rich database that overcomes the problems encountered by other firm-level studies to shed some light on the employment generation of small firms in Spain. We find that small firms contribute to employment disproportionately across all sectors of the economy although the difference between their employment and job creation share is largest in the manufacturing sector. The job creators in that sector are both new and established firms whereas only new small firms outperform their larger counterparts in the service sector. The large annual job creation of the small firm size class is shifting the firm size distribution towards the very small production units, although not uniformly across industries of different technology intensit

    Conceptual frameworks and empirical approaches used to assess the impact of health research: an overview of reviews

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>How to assess the impact of research is of growing interest to funders, policy makers and researchers mainly to understand the value of investments and to increase accountability. Broadly speaking the term "research impact" refers to the contribution of research activities to achieve desired societal outcomes. The aim of this overview is to identify the most common approaches to research impact assessment, categories of impact and their respective indicators.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We systematically searched the relevant literature (PubMed, The Cochrane Library (1990-2009)) and funding agency websites. We included systematic reviews, theoretical and methodological papers, and empirical case-studies on how to evaluate research impact. We qualitatively summarised the included reports, as well the conceptual frameworks.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We identified twenty-two reports belonging to four systematic reviews and 14 primary studies. These publications reported several theoretical frameworks and methodological approaches (bibliometrics, econometrics, ad hoc case studies). The "payback model" emerged as the most frequently used. Five broad categories of impact were identified: a) advancing knowledge, b) capacity building, c) informing decision-making, d) health benefits, e) broad socio-economic benefits. For each proposed category of impact we summarized a set of indicators whose pros and cons are presented and briefly discussed.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>This overview is a comprehensive, yet descriptive, contribution to summarize the conceptual framework and taxonomy of an heterogeneous and evolving area of research. A shared and comprehensive conceptual framework does not seem to be available yet and its single components (epidemiologic, economic, and social) are often valued differently in different models.</p
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