3,460 research outputs found

    COMMENT: ENERGY ACCOUNTING: THE CASE OF FARM MACHINERY IN MARYLAND

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    Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,

    ESTABLISHING LINKAGES BETWEEN ECONOMIC THEORY AND ENTERPRISE BUDGETING FOR TEACHING AND EXTENSION PROGRAMS

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    Accounting techniques of farm enterprise budgeting are rarely linked to the axioms of static production theory and to capital theory. This paper illustrates how certain linkages may be established. Particular attention is given to handling problems of scale economies, optimal output levels, replacement of durable inputs, inflation, and technological change. Estimates in an illustrative budget are linked to specific points on average cost curves. Budgeting for representative farm situations is compared to budgeting for specific situations.Teaching/Communication/Extension/Profession,

    AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS RESEARCH AND THE EXPERIMENT STATION SYSTEM

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    This paper discusses the role of agricultural economics research within the land-grant university system. Fundamental differences between research in the biological sciences and the social sciences are delineated. Implications of these differences for experiment station research programs are discussed. Recommendations are made which have potential for enhancing the role of agricultural economics within colleges of agriculture.Teaching/Communication/Extension/Profession,

    RURAL-URBAN DIFFERENCES IN NURSING HOME ACCESS, QUALITY AND COST

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    Rural-urban differences in the supply of nursing home services as hypothesized to be jointly affected by competitive and regulatory forces, government policies, and the cost structure. Study findings indicate that rural services are slightly less accessible and lower in quality. A translog cost share function reveals no difference in the operating cost structure of rural and urban homes. Cost shares for nursing care are directly related to the degree of skilled nursing provided by homes. Significant scale economies were not detected for any of the major operating costs.Rural health care, Nursing homes, Cost structure, Health Economics and Policy,

    AN ANALYSIS OF ALTERNATIVE NET PRESENT VALUE CAPITAL INVESTMENT DECISION MODELS

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    We have found that the disagreement between Returns-to-Assets (RTA) and Returns-to-Equity (RTE) proponents is not confined to agricultural economics. Depending on the course they are taking and the accompanying text, students are likely to learn that there is a "right" way to calculate Net Present Values (NPVs), either by the RTA method or the RTE method. In most cases, only one of the two methods is discussed and illustrated with numerical examples. Less common are texts that compare the two methods, discuss their underlying assumptions, or show how the NPVs from the two methods can be reconciled. The paper is organized as follows. The first section of the main body of the paper provides a comparative overview of the RTA and RTE methods; the second section discusses our textbook survey; the final section offers our conclusions. Appendix A contains a brief history of the theoretical development of discounted cash flow (DCF) concepts. Appendix B contains additional details on defining components of NPV models. Finally, Appendix C is a listing of some additional references.Research Methods/ Statistical Methods,

    HANDLING DURABLE AND NONDURABLE FARM INPUT DECISIONS USING A SINGLE THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK

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    Students in economics are taught that the optimal usage of a nundurable input occurs when the value of its marginal product (VMP) equals its marginal cost (MC). However, this fundamental condition has rarely been extended to durable inputs. Even advanced textbooks have done little to compare and contrast the optimality conditions for durables versus nondurables. This paper outlines and compares a common VMP-MC decision for (1) nondurables in a single-period time horizon, (2) durables in a finite planning horizon, and (3) durables in an infinite planning horizon.Agricultural Finance,

    Characterization of radially symmetric finite time blowup in multidimensional aggregation equations,

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    This paper studies the transport of a mass μ\mu in d,d2,\real^d, d \geq 2, by a flow field v=Kμv= -\nabla K*\mu. We focus on kernels K=xα/αK=|x|^\alpha/ \alpha for 2dα<22-d\leq \alpha<2 for which the smooth densities are known to develop singularities in finite time. For this range This paper studies the transport of a mass μ\mu in d,d2,\real^d, d \geq 2, by a flow field v=Kμv= -\nabla K*\mu. We focus on kernels K=xα/αK=|x|^\alpha/ \alpha for 2dα<22-d\leq \alpha<2 for which the smooth densities are known to develop singularities in finite time. For this range we prove the existence for all time of radially symmetric measure solutions that are monotone decreasing as a function of the radius, thus allowing for continuation of the solution past the blowup time. The monotone constraint on the data is consistent with the typical blowup profiles observed in recent numerical studies of these singularities. We prove monotonicity is preserved for all time, even after blowup, in contrast to the case α>2\alpha >2 where radially symmetric solutions are known to lose monotonicity. In the case of the Newtonian potential (α=2d\alpha=2-d), under the assumption of radial symmetry the equation can be transformed into the inviscid Burgers equation on a half line. This enables us to prove preservation of monotonicity using the classical theory of conservation laws. In the case 2d<α<22 -d < \alpha < 2 and at the critical exponent pp we exhibit initial data in LpL^p for which the solution immediately develops a Dirac mass singularity. This extends recent work on the local ill-posedness of solutions at the critical exponent.Comment: 30 page
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