93,959 research outputs found
Informal production and labour market segmentation
This is the author's final version of the article. The final publication is available from the link below. Copyright © 2011 Mohr Siebeck.An industry is modeled in which entrepreneurs, who are heterogeneous in ability,
may produce formally or informally. Two cases are distinguished, with and without
labour market segmentation, for which different patterns of formal/informal
supply obtain. Without segmentation, informality may generate production where
otherwise there would be none. Typically, however, a trade-off obtains: when informality makes output higher it cuts the profit of the most able entrepreneurs, potentially
damaging growth. With segmentation, informality causes some replacement
of ‘good’ jobs by ‘bad,’ and total employment may be affected in either direction;
without segmentation the effect on total employment is weakly positive
Self-employment, wage employment and informality in a developing economy
This article has been made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund.We construct a simple model incorporating various urban labour market phenomena obtaining in developing economies, and we give a diagrammatic formulation of the market equilibrium. Our initial formulation assumes an integrated labour market and allows for entrepreneurship, self-employment, and wage employment. We then introduce labour market segmentation. In equilibrium voluntary and involuntary self-employment, formal and informal wage employment, and formal and informal entrepreneurship may all coexist. We illustrate the model by an example calibrated on Latin American data, examining individual labour market transitions and implications of education/training and labour market policies
Broadcasting of three qubit entanglement via local copying and entanglement swapping
In this work,We investigate the problem of secretly broadcasting of
three-qubit entangled state between two distant partners. The interesting
feature of this problem is that starting from two particle entangled state
shared between two distant partners we find that the action of local cloner on
the qubits and the measurement on the machine state vector generates
three-qubit entanglement between them. The broadcasting of entanglement is made
secret by sending the measurement result secretly using cryptographic scheme
based on orthogonal states. Further we show that this idea can be extended to
generate three particle entangled state between three distant partners.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures, Accepted in Physical Review
The United Kingdom Ministry of Defence – the Case for Followership as a key Element of Leadership Development
Published in Strategic Management Quarterly (2015) Vol 3 Issue 4Using the Kelley (1992) Followership Style instrument this study explores the role and perceptions of Followership within the UK Ministry of Defence. In particular, within the Armed Services and the Civil Service it was apparent from the literature that only the RAF formally recognised the role of Followership within their Leadership staff development programmes, hence the research aimed to see whether this was reflected in self-perceptions of Followership Style and the extent to which it is applied within the organisation. The analysis concluded that the analysed sample (298 responses) produced an atypical profile compared to other studies that have used the instrument. The RAF showed statistically significant higher scores than the other Armed Services or the Civil Servants and scores increased with Rank/Grade. The analysis also highlighted that the individuals seemed not to be recognised as good Followers by their leaders, they appeared not to recognise their reports as good Followers and in all cases the organisation seemed not to recognise their value. These aspects provide scope for further research to better understand the organisational culture, processes and practices that appear to act as a barrier to the extraction of the benefits of having good Followers even in an area where Star Followers dominate
Privatisation Methods and Economic Growth in Transition Economies
In low-income countries privatization, if implemented appropriately, may play an
important role in generating growth. Using data recently available from Central and
Eastern Europe, we therefore investigate the impact of alternative methods of
privatization on economic growth. Our analysis suggests that the use of conventional
privatization methods to match owners with firms can be inefficient in economies
with underdeveloped capital markets, particularly if wealth is poorly correlated with
managerial and entrepreneurial ability. In these circumstances mass privatization,
with firms being given away or sold at a nominal price, may be the appropriate policy
choice
Mnemonic discrimination relates to perforant path integrity: An ultra-high resolution diffusion tensor imaging study.
Pattern separation describes the orthogonalization of similar inputs into unique, non-overlapping representations. This computational process is thought to serve memory by reducing interference and to be mediated by the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus. Using ultra-high in-plane resolution diffusion tensor imaging (hrDTI) in older adults, we previously demonstrated that integrity of the perforant path, which provides input to the dentate gyrus from entorhinal cortex, was associated with mnemonic discrimination, a behavioral outcome designed to load on pattern separation. The current hrDTI study assessed the specificity of this perforant path integrity-mnemonic discrimination relationship relative to other cognitive constructs (identified using a factor analysis) and white matter tracts (hippocampal cingulum, fornix, corpus callosum) in 112 healthy adults (20-87 years). Results revealed age-related declines in integrity of the perforant path and other medial temporal lobe (MTL) tracts (hippocampal cingulum, fornix). Controlling for global effects of brain aging, perforant path integrity related only to the factor that captured mnemonic discrimination performance. Comparable integrity-mnemonic discrimination relationships were also observed for the hippocampal cingulum and fornix. Thus, whereas perforant path integrity specifically relates to mnemonic discrimination, mnemonic discrimination may be mediated by a broader MTL network
Scaling Laws for Non-Intercommuting Cosmic String Networks
We study the evolution of non-interacting and entangled cosmic string
networks in the context of the velocity-dependent one-scale model. Such
networks may be formed in several contexts, including brane inflation. We show
that the frozen network solution , although generic, is only a
transient one, and that the asymptotic solution is still as in the
case of ordinary (intercommuting) strings, although in the present context the
universe will usually be string-dominated. Thus the behaviour of two strings
when they cross does not seem to affect their scaling laws, but only their
densities relative to the background.Comment: Phys. Rev. D (in press); v2: final published version (references
added, typos corrected
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