18,408 research outputs found
Revival of classical political economy: An exposition
The purpose of this paper is twofold: first, to discuss the theoretical foundations and policy implications of two of the offshoots of modern macroeconomics viz., supply-side economics and rational expectations; and second to evaluate the recent development of thinking in macroeconomics. Thereby it tries to bring forth the current state of macroeconomics, although the term “current” itself is a difficult term to define as the only constant thing is ‘change’, more so in case of an evolutionary science like economics. While highlighting the celebrated classical-Keynesian debate, it thoroughly examines the supply-side economics and rational expectations hypothesis with due importance to their practical application
Experimental results for the Poincar\'e center problem (including an Appendix with Martin Cremer)
We apply a heuristic method based on counting points over finite fields to
the Poincar\'e center problem. We show that this method gives the correct
results for homogeneous non linearities of degree 2 and 3. Also we obtain new
evidence for Zoladek's conjecture about general degree 3 non linearitiesComment: 16 pages, 2 figures, source code of programs at
http://www-ifm.math.uni-hannover.de/~bothmer/strudel/. Added references, the
result of Example 6.2 is not new. Added two new sections on rationally
reversible systems. The 4th codim 7 component we saw only experimentally can
now also be identified geometrical
Geometric Syzygies of Canonical Curves of even Genus lying on a K3-Surface
Based on a recent result of Voisin [2001] we describe the last nonzero syzygy
space in the linear strand of a canonical curve C of even genus g=2k lying on a
K3 surface, as the ambient space of a k-2-uple embedded P^{k+1}. Furthermore
the geometric syzygies constructed by Green and Lazarsfeld [1984] from
g^1_{k+1}'s form a non degenerate configuration of finitely many rational
normal curves on this P^{k+1}. This proves a natural generalization of Green's
conjecture [1984], namely that the geometric syzygies should span the space of
all syzygies, in this case.Comment: 29 pages; 5 figure
Significance of log-periodic signatures in cumulative noise
Using methods introduced by Scargle in 1978 we derive a cumulative version of
the Lomb periodogram that exhibits frequency independent statistics when
applied to cumulative noise. We show how this cumulative Lomb periodogram
allows us to estimate the significance of log-periodic signatures in the S&P
500 anti-bubble that started in August 2000.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures; AMS-Latex; introduction rewritten, some points
of the exposition clarified. Author-supplied PDF file with high resolution
graphics is available at http://btm8x5.mat.uni-bayreuth.de/~bothmer
Legislating for universal access to medicines : a rights-based cross-national comparison of UHC laws in 16 countries
Universal health coverage (UHC) aims to ensure that all people have access to health services including essential medicines without risking financial hardship. Yet, in many low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) inadequate UHC fails to ensure universal access to medicines and protect the poor and vulnerable against catastrophic spending in the event of illness. A human rights approach to essential medicines in national UHC legislation could remedy these inequities. This study identifies and compares legal texts from national UHC legislation that promote universal access to medicines in the legislation of 16 mostly LMICs: Algeria, Chile, Colombia, Ghana, Indonesia, Jordan, Mexico, Morocco, Nigeria, Philippines, Rwanda, South Africa, Tanzania, Turkey, Tunisia and Uruguay. The assessment tool was developed based on WHO's policy guidelines for essential medicines and international human rights law; it consists of 12 principles in three domains: legal rights and obligations, good governance, and technical implementation. Relevant legislation was identified, mapped, collected and independently assessed by multi-disciplinary, multi-lingual teams. Legal rights and State obligations toward medicines are frequently codified in UHC law, while most good governance principles are less common. Some technical implementation principles are frequently embedded in national UHC law (i.e. pooled user contributions and financial coverage for the vulnerable), while others are infrequent (i.e. sufficient government financing) to almost absent (i.e. seeking international assistance and cooperation). Generally, upper-middle and high-income countries tended to embed explicit rights and obligations with clear boundaries, and universal mechanisms for accountability and redress in domestic law while less affluent countries took different approaches. This research presents national law makers with both a checklist and a wish list for legal reform for access to medicines, as well as examples of legal texts. It may support goal 7 of the WHO Medicines & Health Products Strategic Programme 2016-30 to develop model legislation for medicines reimbursement
The right to health as the basis for universal health coverage : a cross-national analysis of national medicines policies of 71 countries
Persistent barriers to universal access to medicines are limited social protection in the event of illness, inadequate financing for essential medicines, frequent stock-outs in the public sector, and high prices in the private sector. We argue that greater coherence between human rights law, national medicines policies, and universal health coverage schemes can address these barriers. We present a cross-national content analysis of national medicines policies from 71 countries published between 1990-2016. The World Health Organization's ( WHO) 2001 guidelines for developing and implementing a national medicines policy and all 71 national medicines policies were assessed on 12 principles, linking a health systems approach to essential medicines with international human rights law for medicines affordability and financing for vulnerable groups. National medicines policies most frequently contain measures for medicines selection and efficient spending/cost-effectiveness. Four principles ( legal right to health; government financing; efficient spending; and financial protection of vulnerable populations) are significantly stronger in national medicines policies published after 2004 than before. Six principles have remained weak or absent: pooling user contributions, international cooperation, and four principles for good governance. Overall, South Africa ( 1996), Indonesia and South Sudan ( 2006), Philippines ( 2011-2016), Malaysia ( 2012), Somalia ( 2013), Afghanistan ( 2014), and Uganda ( 2015) include the most relevant texts and can be used as models for other settings. We conclude that WHO's 2001 guidelines have guided the content and language of many subsequent national medicines policies. WHO and national policy makers can use these principles and the practical examples identified in our study to further align national medicines policies with human rights law and with Target 3.8 for universal access to essential medicines in the Sustainable Development Goals
Geometric syzygies of elliptic normal curves and their secant varieties
We show that the linear syzygy spaces of elliptic normal curves, their secant
varieties and of bielliptic canonical curves are spanned by geometric syzygies.Comment: 31 Pages; AMSlate
Microscopic theory of pion production and sidewards flow in heavy ion collisions
Nuclear collisions from 0.3 to 2 GeV/nucleon are studied in a microscopic theory based on Vlasov's self-consistent mean field and Uehling-Uhlenbeck's two-body collision term which respects the Pauli principle. The theory explains simultaneously the observed collective flow and the pion multiplicity and gives their dependence on the nuclear equation of state
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