145 research outputs found

    Behind the Scenes of the Telecommunications Miracle: An Empirical Analysis of the Indian Market

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    We analyze the demand and supply characteristics of the Indian telecommunications market, in order to assess the potential effectiveness of universal access policies in developing countries. We provide some empirical evidence on the supply and demand characteristics, using a small time-series-cross-section dataset on Indian States. We suggest that the price elasticity of demand for mainlines might be sensibly higher than the levels usually found in developed countries, while the crucial role of income and other sociodemographic variables seems to be confirmed. We also study the impact of cellular penetration, identifying a (positive) network effect in low penetration areas and some evidence of substitution (displacement) in the most developed ones. We finally analyze the supply side of the market, trying to assess the impact of market competition on investment: competition seemingly helps stimulating investment in the most developed areas, but has probably no significant impact in the less developed ones.telecommunications demand, universal service, competition, developing countries, India

    Incomplete Regulation, Competition and Entry in Increasing Returns to Scale Industries

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    The paper analyzes the effects of liberalization in increasing returns to scale industries. It studies the optimal regulation of an incumbent competing with an unregulated strategic competitor, when public funds are costly. The model shows a trade off between productive and allocative efficiency. Moreover, the welfare gains of liberalization, as compared with regulated monopoly, are a non monotonic function of the cost of public funds. Finally, in the case of severe cash constraint of the government, incomplete regulation may also dominate full regulation of duopoly.Incomplete Regulation, Asymmetric Information, Incentives, Cost of Public Funds.

    Regulating National Firms in a Common Market

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    We consider the regulation of national firms in a common market. Regulators can influence the production of national firms but they incur in a positive cost of public funds. First, we show that market integration is welfare improving if and only if the efficiency gains compensate for the negative public finance effect (related to business stealing). We also show that supranational competition can have very different consequences on the rent seeking behaviour of firms, depending on cost correlation and ex-ante technological risk. Finally, we characterize the global optimum and show how it can be sustained in a decentralized bargaining solution.regulation, competition, market integration, cost of public funds

    Economic Integration and Investment Incentives in Regulated Industries

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    The paper studies the impact of market integration on investment incentives in non-competitive industries. It distinguishes between investment in transportation and production cost-reducing technologies. Each domestic firm is controlled by a national regulator in a common market made of two countries. When public funds are costly, and production costs in the two countries are not very different, business stealing effect decreases welfare in both countries. Welfare increases in both countries when the difference in production costs is large enough. Market integration tends to increase the level of sustainable investment in costreducing technology compared to autarky. This is in contrast with the systematic underinvestment problem arising for transportation facilities. Free-riding reduces the incentives to invest in these public-good components, while business-stealing reduces the capacity for financing new investment.

    Intellectual Property Rights Adoption in Developing Countries

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    This paper studies the incentives that developing countries have to enforce intellectual properties rights (IPR). On the one hand, free-riding on rich countries technology reduces the investment cost in R&D. On the other hand, it yields apotential indirect cost: a firm that violates IPR cannot legally export in a country that enforces them. IPR act like a barrier to entry of the advanced economy markets. Moreover free-riders cannot prevent other to copy their own innovation. The analysis, which distinguishes between large and small developing countries, predicts that small ones should be willing to respect IPR if they want to export and access advanced economies markets, while large emerging countries, such as China and India, will be more reluctant to do so as their huge domestic markets develop. Global welfare is higher under the full protection regime if the developing country does not innovate. It is higher under a partial regime if both countries have access to similar R&D technology and the developing country market is large enough

    Universal Intellectual Property Rights: Too Much of a Good Thing?

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    Developing countries' incentives to protect intellectual property rights (IPR) are studied in a model of vertical innovation. Enforcing IPR boosts export opportunities to advanced economies but slows down technological transfers and incentives to invest in R&D. Asymmetric protection of IPR, strict in the North and lax in the South, leads in many cases to a higher world level of innovation than universal enforcement. IPR enforcement is U-shaped in the relative size of the export market compared to the domestic one: rich countries and small/poor countries enforce IPR, the former to protect their innovations, the latter to access foreign markets, while large emerging countries free-ride on rich countries' technology to serve their internal demand

    Mapeamento e carcterização dos depósitos em subsuperfície do setor meridional da Planície Costeira Sul de Santa Catarina

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    Na Planície Costeira Sul de Santa Catarina, entre o rio Mampituba e o norte da lagoa do Sombrio encontram-se depósitos costeiros gerados por transgressões e regressões da linha de costa no Quaternário. Em termos evolutivos os sistemas deposicionais costeiros são semelhantes aos encontrados na Planície Costeira do Rio Grande do Sul. Este estudo tem como objetivos o mapeamento das feições geológicas e geomorfológicas presentes e a caracterização da estratigrafia dos depósitos sedimentares em subsuperfície. Para tanto, foram integrados dados de Sensoriamento Remoto, de Geomorfologia, de Geofísica (radar de penetração do solo - GPR) e de mapas geológicos pré-existentes. Partindo da premissa que as curvas de variação relativa do nível do mar possam diferenciar depósitos pleistocênicos de holocênicos foram integradas ferramentas que auxiliaram identificar estas unidades. Nas seções obtidas com o GPR foram identificadas estruturas de sistemas deposicionais progradantes, gerados em ambientes subaquosos. Através desses dados foi possível propor um paleonível do mar a partir de estruturas sedimentares identificadas nos depósitos em subsuperfície. De acordo com os dados altimétricos, geofísicos e geomorfológicos nenhum evento transgressivo com cotas relativas ao último máximo transgressivo pleistocênico foi identificado no setor leste da lagoa do Sombrio. Dessa forma, a área de estudo foi caracterizada como um sistema costeiro holocênico progradacional, formado por um paleocampo de dunas recobrindo parte dos cordões litorâneos regressivos (foredune ridges) e por um campo de dunas transgressivo (transgressive dunefield) junto à linha de costa.In the south of Santa Catarina Coastal Plain, between the Mampituba river and north Sombrio lagoon are coastal deposits generated by transgressions and regressions of the shoreline in the Quaternary. In evolutionary terms the coastal depositional systems are similar to those found in the of Rio Grande do Sul coastal plain. This study aims to map the geological and geomorphological features present the characterization of the stratigraphy of the sedimentary subsurface. Therefore, data were integrated Remote Sensing of Geomorphology, Geophysics (ground penetrating radar - GPR) and geological maps pre-existing. Assuming that the curves of relative variation in sea level can differentiate Pleistocene to Holocene deposits have been integrated tools that helped identify these units. In sections obtained from the GPR were identified structures of prograding depositional systems, generated in subaqueous environments. Through these data it was possible to propose a palaeo-sea level from structures identified in the sedimentary deposits in the subsurface. According to the altimetric data, geophysical and geomorphological transgressive event with no quotas for the last Pleistocene transgressive maximum was identified in the eastern sector of the Sombrio lagoon. Thus, the study area was characterized as a coastal Holocene progradational system, consisting of a palaeodune covering of the foredune ridges and a transgressive dunefield along the coastline

    Collaboration between SAML federations and OpenStack clouds

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    In this paper, we present a novel OpenStack module called regsite for enabling easy access for researchers to OpenStack research clouds. Many researchers have an account in an Academic AAI federation, such as national research and education federations or the eduGAIN SAML meta-federation. The software solution presented here makes it possible to use these institutional accounts together with so-called virtual organization managers for authenticating and authorizing in OpenStack instances in a clean and secure way. An analysis of earlier generations of OpenStack-related developments trying to tackle the same problem is given. Many aspects of this software integration can be generalized to serve as a template for federative research cloud access. Keywords: SAML, OpenStack, Research loud, eduGAI

    Intellectual Property Rights Protection and Trade: An Empirical Analysis

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    The paper proposes an empirical analysis of the determinants of the adoption of Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) and their impact on innovation in manufac- turing. The analysis is conducted with panel data covering 112 countries. First we show that IPR protection is U-shaped with respect to a country’s market size and inverse-U-shaped with respect to the aggregated market size of its trade partners. Second, reinforcing IPR protection reduces on-the-frontier and inside-the-frontier innovation in developing countries, without necessarily increasing innovation at the global level

    Intellectual Property Rights Protection and Trade: An Empirical Analysis

    Get PDF
    The paper proposes an empirical analysis of the determinants of the adoption of Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) and their impact on innovation in manufac- turing. The analysis is conducted with panel data covering 112 countries. First we show that IPR protection is U-shaped with respect to a country’s market size and inverse-U-shaped with respect to the aggregated market size of its trade partners. Second, reinforcing IPR protection reduces on-the-frontier and inside-the-frontier innovation in developing countries, without necessarily increasing innovation at the global level
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