2,471 research outputs found
When should the Polygraph Stimulation Number Test be Performed?
"In his recently published monograph Badania poligraficzne â podrÄcznik dla
zawodowcĂłw, literally âPolygraph testing â a handbook for professionalsâ, Jerzy
Konieczny recommends performing the stimulation number test as the first
in the series, opening the examination (Konieczny 2009, 151, 155). Besides
him, a few other authors recommend that this test begins the examination.
In Truth and Deception, a work that has become a classic, J. Reid and F. Inbau
(1976, 38) recommend using the stimulation test second, after conducting
the first test of control questions, and before its repetition."(...
Some benefits of reducing inflation in transition economies
We analyse welfare effects of the interactions between the tax system and inflation in Poland and in Ukraine, using the framework developed by Feldstein (1997, 1999). This approach stresses the fact that inflation increases distortions created by the tax system, in particular distortions to intertemporal saving decisions. We find that the effects are much smaller in the two transition countries than in developed marketeconomies. The reason is that taxation of investment returns is much more limited. Our results suggest that taxes on investment returns should be avoided in any future redesign of the tax system.Poland, Ukraine, inflation, tax system
Some benefits of reducing inflation in transition economies
We analyse welfare effects of the interactions between the tax system and inflation in Poland and in Ukraine, using the framework developed by Feldstein (1997, 1999). This approach stresses the fact that inflation increases distortions created by the tax system, in particular distortions to intertemporal saving decisions. We find that the effects are much smaller in the two transition countries than in developed marketeconomies. The reason is that taxation of investment returns is much more limited. Our results suggest that taxes on investment returns should be avoided in any future redesign of the tax system.
Temporal Distribution of Price Changes : Staggering in the Large and Synchronization in the Small
Temporal distribution of individual price changes is of crucial importance for business cycle theory and for the micro-foundations of price adjustment. While it is routinely assumed that price changes are staggered over time, both theory and evidence are ambiguous. We use a large Belgian data set to analyze whether price changes are staggered or synchronized. We find that the more aggregate the data, the closer the distribution to perfect staggering. This result holds for both aggregation across goods and across locations. Our results provide support for Bhaskarâs (2002) model of synchronized adjustment within, and staggered adjustment across, industries.staggering, synchronization, aggregation, price setting
Temporal Distribution of Price Changes: Staggering in the Large and Synchronization in the Small
Temporal distribution of individual price changes is of crucial importance for business cycle theory and for the microfoundations of price adjustment. While it is routinely assumed that price changes are staggered over time, both theory and evidence are ambiguous. We use a large Belgian data set to analyze whether price changes are staggered or synchronized. We find that the more aggregated are the data, the closer is the distribution to perfect staggering. This result holds both for aggregation across goods, and across locations. Our results provide support for BhaskarĂs (2002) model of synchronized adjustment within, and staggered adjustment across, industries.
Public health security in crisis situations. Basic Premises and strategic objectives
In recent years the approach to public health has changed, making the adoption of a uniform definition difficult. This is forced by the growing number of extraordinary dangers: terrorist attacks, natural disasters, dangerous invading microbial and virus diseases, bioterrorist, chemical and radiation threats, transport accidents and disasters. These threats create crisis situations which are very complicated and define new challenges for the authorities and public health leaders as well as for officials and health inspectors. In the speculation below, an attempt has been made to present a new pyramid of leadership in the public health sector in crisis situations, the assumptions and strategic objectives of a health security strategy are stated
Polygraph examination in analysis of evidence
"I assume that a polygraph examination may be part of mass of evidence in
a specific case, and I also assume that the result of a polygraph examination
belongs to forensic evidence, and within it has its place in expert evidence.
Therefore, as item of evidence, it can be subjected to an analysis covering the
assessment of its credibility, reliability, weigh, probative force, etc., and can
also be analysed as evidential argument. Such an argument may be evaluated
from two points of view: âinternalâ developed by its creator (in this case: by
the expert), and âexternalâ whose author is the analyst, or, more generally
speaking, the addressee of the argument. Th e âinternalâ analysis is presented
in (Ibek 2011). Th is article, in turn, aims at presenting the characteristic features
of a polygraph examination result as argument in analysis of evidence."(...
Regular adjustment: theory and evidence
We ask why, in many circumstances and many environments, decision-makers choose to act on a time-regular basis (e.g. adjust every six weeks) or on a stateregular basis (e.g. set prices ending in a 9), even though such an approach appears suboptimal. The paper attributes regular behaviour to adjustment cost heterogeneity. We show that, given the cost heterogeneity, the likelihood of adopting regular policies depends on the shape of the benefit function: the flatter it is, the more likely, ceteris paribus, is regular adjustment. We provide sufficient conditions under which, when policymakers differ with respect to the shape of the benefit function (as in Konieczny and Skrzypacz, 2006), the frequency of adjustments across markets is negatively correlated with the incidence of regular adjustments. On the other hand, if policymakers differences are due to the level of adjustment costs (as in Dotsey, King and Wolman, 1999), then the correlation is positive. To test the model we apply it to optimal pricing policies. We use a large Austrian data set, which consists of the direct price information collected by the statistical office and covers 80% of the CPI over eight years. We run cross-sectional tests, regressing the proportion of attractive prices and, separately, the excess proportion of price changes at the beginning of a year and at the beginning of a quarter, on various conditional frequencies of adjustment, inflation and its variability, dummies for good types, and other relevant variables. We find that the lower is, in a given market, the conditional frequency of price changes, the higher is the incidence of time- and state-regular adjustment. JEL Classification: E31, L11, E52, D01attractive prices, menu costs, Optimal pricing
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