379 research outputs found

    Do clubs foster provision success ?

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    We report the results of an experiment on the provision of a step-level collective good. We compare subjects’ behavior in a public good game and in a club good game. In the club good game, players who contribute less than the amount required to become a member, do not benefit from the collective good. Compared to the benchmark step-level public good, we find that the introduction of a small membership fee has surprisingly strong effects. It increases significantly the provision success of the collective good.

    From Bound Duties to Actual Protection: Industrial Liberalisation in the Doha Round. ENEPRI Working Paper No. 41, 2005

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    In the background of the Doha Round of trade negotiations, this study proposes a CGE assessment of multilateral liberalisation of market access for non-agricultural products. The scenarios considered include the so-called ‘Girard proposal’ (with alternative choices for the coefficient involved), the removal of tariff peaks and complete liberalisation. This study is the first to take into account the difference between bound and applied tariffs, while considering all the enforced preferential trade arrangements and computing tariff cuts at the detailed product level (HS-6 classification). Although the liberalisation of market access for non-agricultural products is found to be welfare-enhancing at the world level, cross-country distributive effects prove significant. A soft liberalisation would not significantly reduce applied duties in developing countries, owing to their considerable binding overhang. By contrast, a deep liberalisation would entail fierce price competition among those developing countries that are largely specialised in similar sectors and in the same product quality range

    Unsupervised and semi-supervised clustering with learnable cluster dependent kernels.

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    Despite the large number of existing clustering methods, clustering remains a challenging task especially when the structure of the data does not correspond to easily separable categories, and when clusters vary in size, density and shape. Existing kernel based approaches allow to adapt a specific similarity measure in order to make the problem easier. Although good results were obtained using the Gaussian kernel function, its performance depends on the selection of the scaling parameter. Moreover, since one global parameter is used for the entire data set, it may not be possible to find one optimal scaling parameter when there are large variations between the distributions of the different clusters in the feature space. One way to learn optimal scaling parameters is through an exhaustive search of one optimal scaling parameter for each cluster. However, this approach is not practical since it is computationally expensive especially when the data includes a large number of clusters and when the dynamic range of possible values of the scaling parameters is large. Moreover, it is not trivial to evaluate the resulting partition in order to select the optimal parameters. To overcome this limitation, we introduce two new fuzzy relational clustering techniques that learn cluster dependent Gaussian kernels. The first algorithm called clustering and Local Scale Learning algorithm (LSL) minimizes one objective function for both the optimal partition and for cluster dependent scaling parameters that reflect the intra-cluster characteristics of the data. The second algorithm, called Fuzzy clustering with Learnable Cluster dependent Kernels (FLeCK) learns the scaling parameters by optimizing both the intra-cluster and the inter-cluster dissimilarities. Consequently, the learned scale parameters reflect the relative density, size, and position of each cluster with respect to the other clusters. We also introduce semi-supervised versions of LSL and FLeCK. These algorithms generate a fuzzy partition of the data and learn the optimal kernel resolution of each cluster simultaneously. We show that the incorporation of a small set of constraints can guide the clustering process to better learn the scaling parameters and the fuzzy memberships in order to obtain a better partition of the data. In particular, we show that the partial supervision is even more useful on real high dimensional data sets where the algorithms are more susceptible to local minima. All of the proposed algorithms are optimized iteratively by dynamically updating the partition and the scaling parameter in each iteration. This makes these algorithms simple and fast. Moreover, our algorithms are formulated to work on relational data. This makes them applicable to data where objects cannot be represented by vectors or when clusters of similar objects cannot be represented efficiently by a single prototype. Our extensive experiments show that FLeCK and SS-FLeCK outperform existing algorithms. In particular, we show that when data include clusters with various inter-cluster and intra-cluster distances, learning cluster dependent kernel is crucial in obtaining a good partition

    The Cost of non-Maghreb: Achieving the Gains from Economic Integration

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    The purpose of this paper is to estimate the impact of the integration of Maghreb countries into a free trade area on the main macroeconomic aggregates. By using the MIRAGE model and MacMap database, we tested different scenarios to estimate the gains or the potential losses of various plans of trade integration (Free trade area for the Maghreb countries, Custom Union between Maghreb countries, Maghreban Common Market). Our study suggests that the overall gains from liberalizing trade in goods (and removing various regulatory non-tariff barriers in the process) could reach at least USD 350 million. The increase in revenue through increases in production and wages would positively affect welfare levels for Maghreb consumers. The dynamic gains from liberalizing trade in goods can outstrip the static gains, with productivity improvements as the main driver. Our analysis shows that the creation of a common market is probably the most interesting and efficient option for the Maghreb countries.Free Trade Area, Maghreb, and CGE Model

    Pour une utilisation durable des nappes d'eau souterraine : une approche par les incitations

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    La gestion d'une ressource en commun pose le problĂšme de la surexploitation. Cette possibilitĂ© se produit lorsque l'appropriateur cherche Ă  maximiser son profit tout en partageant le coĂ»t de son exploitation avec les autres appropriateurs. C'est le modĂšle de la tragĂ©die des communs de Hardin (1968). Les solutions proposĂ©es pour dĂ©passer ce dilemme sont la gestion centralisĂ©e de la ressource, l'instauration des droits de propriĂ©tĂ© transfĂ©rable et la gestion collective. La Tunisie a optĂ© pour ce dernier choix Ă  travers une gestion dĂ©centralisĂ©e par les groupements Ă  intĂ©rĂȘt collectif (GIC). L'implĂ©mentation des rĂšgles dans une action collective articulĂ©e autour de l'exploitation d'une nappe Ă  accĂšs libre constitue la finalitĂ© du papier. Pour cela, nous nous proposons, dans le cadre de ce travail, la rĂ©alisation d'un diagnostic de la situation Ă©tudiĂ©e en vue de mieux apprĂ©hender son fonctionnement. Nous cherchons Ă  effectuer une reprĂ©sentation sous forme de jeux du problĂšme d'accĂšs Ă  la nappe et de l'allocation de la ressource, situations oĂč se pose la question de l'implĂ©mentation des rĂšgles. La structure du Dilemme du Prisonnier est souvent utilisĂ©e pour rendre compte de l'exploitation de la ressource en commun. Nous nous gardons d'effectuer cette apprĂ©ciation Ă  priori tant qu'une observation se basant sur une mĂ©thodologie d'approche n'ait pas confirmĂ© une structure particuliĂšre de jeu. La revue de la littĂ©rature a permis de distinguer d'autres jeux possibles permettant de rendre compte des problĂšmes dans une action collective. Afin d'identifier ces jeux, nous dĂ©composerons les cas Ă©tudiĂ©s en autant d'actions possibles pertinentes. L'approche adoptĂ©e Ă  cet effet s'inspirera de celle proposĂ©e par Ostrom : l'Institutional Analysis Developpement (IAD). Elle consiste dans la dĂ©finition des variables suivantes : les acteurs participants, l'information dont ils disposent, leurs stratĂ©gies et leurs gains respectifs. Ce travail aura pour terrain d'Ă©tude la plaine de Kairouan

    Nonpoint source pollution: An experimental investigation of the Average Pigouvian Tax

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    The “Average Pigouvian Tax” (APT) was proposed by Suter et al. (2008) to reduce the financial burden of the standard ambient tax. This instrument consists in a standard ambient tax divided by the number of firms, which requires polluters to cooperate in order to achieve the social optimum. To enable polluters to cooperate, communication is allowed. We introduce different types of communication: cheap talk, exogenous costly communication (communication is imposed), and endogenous costly communication (conducted on a voluntary basis after a vote). Our experiment confirms that the instrument induces polluters to reduce their emissions under cheap talk. However, we find that group emissions are less reduced when communication is costly. This result still holds even when we endogenize communication by introducing a voting phase

    Le « paysage urbain » en question

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    L’article expose les orientations mĂ©thodologiques d’une recherche portant sur la notion de paysage urbain. La premiĂšre partie prĂ©cise les enjeux et les problĂ©matiques convoquĂ©s par cette notion – Ă  travers notamment les dĂ©bats actuels entre thĂ©oriciens et professionnels du paysage – et situe les champs de rĂ©fĂ©rence de cette recherche. La seconde partie prĂ©sente les deux axes de recherche retenus. Le premier consiste en une approche gĂ©nĂ©alogique de la construction artistique et conceptuelle du paysage urbain. Le deuxiĂšme s’inscrit dans une dĂ©marche sociologique Ă  travers la rĂ©alisation d’une enquĂȘte qualitative dont l’article exposera les premiĂšres conclusions.The article presents methodological choices of a research about the notion of urban landscape. The first part outlines the issues and problems about this notion (especially through the current debates between landscape professionals and theorists) and make clear reference fields of the study. The second part presents two directions of research selected. First, a genealogical approach focuses on the artistic and conceptual construction of the urban landscape. The second axis is part of a sociological approach by carrying out a qualitative inquiry, which section outlines the first conclusions

    Ecophysiological Responses of Two Olive Tree Cultivars (Olea europaea L. CV Koroneiki and Chemlali) Under Three Water Treatments

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    In this paper, our objective is to assess and compare the effects of three levels of irrigation application on the ecophysiological behavior and plant dry matter accumulation of two young olive tree cultivars Koroneiki, a promising greek cultivar, and Chemlali, the best local cultivar. According to this assessment, we can determine the most efficient water treatment that could be suitable for Mediterranean environments subjected to water shortage conditions. Measurements were made in the green house of the Tunisian Olive tree Institute under normal day-light conditions from March, 16th to April, 21st 2015. Three water treatments were applied which are T100% (control treatment: Daily irrigation at 100% of Available Water Content (AWC)), T50% (Daily irrigation at 50% of AWC) and T0% (Without watering). The results showed that the two olive tree cultivars possess important mechanisms to overtake limited water resources. However, some striking variations existed between the two cultivars studied. Indeed, as water stress increased (T0%), Chemlali maintained longer a high midday leaf water potential compared (- 4.54 MPa) to Koroneiki (- 5.8 MPa). T50% treatment seems to be sufficient for both cultivars. Measurements of total Osmotic Adjustment (OA) showed that olive trees use this mechanism to create very negative leaf water potentials in order to be able to extract water from a dry root environment. The root/shoot ratio of Chemlali plants at T50% treatment was the highest (1.08) comparatively with the other two treatments (0.70 and 0.79 for T100% and T0% AWC water treatments, respectively). This result shows that Chemlali plants valorize low quantities of water (T50%) rather than high quantities (T100%) and Koroneiki plants behave better when it is irrigated at 100% AWC. To conclude, Chemlali plants irrigated at 50% AWC, compared to Koroneiki plants, are the most suitable to tolerate water restriction conditions
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