2,421 research outputs found
Committing to civil service reform : the performance of pre-shipment inspection under different institutional regimes
If the only solution tried for customs corruption and evasion in a developing country is to outsource certain customs functions to a pre-shipment inspection (PSI) company, PSI will prove more of a fiscal burden than a panacea. PSI works best in countries where the customs service already performs fairly well-by reducing the costs of catching evaders. Typically a developing country's customs service brings in a large share of its revenues and accounts for an even larger share of its corruption. One prescription popular among development agencies for reducing corruption and customs evasion by importers has been to outsource certain customs functions to pre-shipment inspection (PSI) companies. More than 35 countries employ PSI as a second-best solution to corruption in customs collection. But whether PSI companies are an effective alternative to comprehensive civil service reform has been widely questioned. The success of PSI contracts depends on the institutional environment-the formal and informal rules of enforcement that affect different agents'incentives-but the reasons for PSI's success or failure in different institutional settings have not been well understood. Johnson presents a simple model highlighting the principal-agent problems in a typical PSI contract. Based on his conclusions, he suggests that PSI should be thought of less as a second-best alternative to customs reform (in countries where the customs service performs poorly) than as a cost-effective complement to reforms in"intermediate"cases (countries where the customs service already performs fairly well). PSI could help in these intermediate cases by reducing the costs of catching evaders. This would make it easier for the ministry of finance to maintain separate reforms to eliminate corruption between customs and importers. In countries where the customs service is powerful-ishighly independent and controls the country's borders-and where the government does not have the institutional ability to put through the complementary reforms essential for using PSI successfully, introducing a PSI contract will add to the burdens of public finance rather than provide the hoped-for panacea.Export Competitiveness,Trade Finance and Investment,Decentralization,Public Sector Economics&Finance,Legal Institutions of the Market Economy,Public Sector Economics&Finance,Trade and Regional Integration,Multi Modal Transport,Legal Institutions of the Market Economy,Judicial System Reform
Lifting homotopy T-algebra maps to strict maps
The settings for homotopical algebra---categories such as simplicial groups,
simplicial rings, spaces, ring spectra, etc.---are often
equivalent to categories of algebras over some monad or triple . In such
cases, is acting on a nice simplicial model category in such a way that
descends to a monad on the homotopy category and defines a category of homotopy
-algebras. In this setting there is a forgetful functor from the homotopy
category of -algebras to the category of homotopy -algebras.
Under suitable hypotheses we provide an obstruction theory, in the form of a
Bousfield-Kan spectral sequence, for lifting a homotopy -algebra map to a
strict map of -algebras. Once we have a map of -algebras to serve as a
basepoint, the spectral sequence computes the homotopy groups of the space of
-algebra maps and the edge homomorphism on is the aforementioned
forgetful functor. We discuss a variety of settings in which the required
hypotheses are satisfied, including monads arising from algebraic theories and
operads. We also give sufficient conditions for the -term to be calculable
in terms of Quillen cohomology groups.
We provide worked examples in -spaces, -spectra, rational
algebras, and algebras. Explicit calculations, connected to rational
unstable homotopy theory, show that the forgetful functor from the homotopy
category of ring spectra to the category of ring spectra
is generally neither full nor faithful. We also apply a result of the second
named author and Nick Kuhn to compute the homotopy type of the space
.Comment: 45 pages. Substantial revision. To appear in Advances in Mathematic
Taxes, lawyers, and the decline of witch trials in France
This paper explores the rise of the fiscal state in the early modern period and its impact on legal capacity. To measure legal capacity, we establish that witchcraft trials were more likely to take place where the central state had weak legal insti- tutions. Combining data on the geographic distribution of witchcraft trials with unique panel data on tax receipts across 21 French regions, we find that the rise of the tax state can account for much of the decline in witch trials during this period. Further historical evidence supports our hypothesis that higher taxes led to better legal institutions.Rule of Law, Witchcraft, France, Institutions, Fiscal Capacity, Legal Capacity
Taxes, National Identity, and Nation Building: Evidence from France
What is the relationship between state capacity, national identity, and economic development? This paper argues that increases in state capacity can lower the collective action costs associated with political and economic exchange by encouraging the formation of a common identity. This hypothesis is tested by exploiting the fact that the French Monarchy was more successful in substituting its fiscal and legal institutions for those of the medieval seigneurial regime within an area of the country known as the Cinq Grosses Fermes (CGF). Highly disaggregated data on regional self-identification from the 1789 Cahiers de Doléances confirm that regions just inside the CGF were more likely than regions just outside the CGF to identify themselves with national, as opposed to local, institutions. We also show that regions inside the CGF that affiliated with national identity were more economically developed during the first half of the nineteenth century and more likely to contribute towards local public goods
Me-FAS, You-FAS, We All Eat PFAS: What To Do About the Forever Chemical
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl, more commonly known as PFAS, has been found in the blood of 95% of the population. PFAS is a family of over 3,000 human-made chemicals. One chemical in the PFAS family, PFOA, is most well-known for its use in Teflon products and has been the subject of multiple litigations. While PFOA has been phased out of production in the United States due to its known negative human health effects, other PFAS that are just as harmful are now used in place of PFOA. The molecular structure of PFAS contains strong bonds that are difficult to break down through natural processes. This characteristic makes PFAS both extremely helpful to industrial processes and harmful to human health and the environment. Because of its resiliency, PFAS remain in the environment long after initial release. Its stability and endurance have led scientists to dub PFAS as “the forever chemical.” This Note explores the history of PFAS production in the United States and concludes with potential regulatory action that can be taken to limit human exposure to PFAS
The black church and political mobilization of African Americans
This study investigates the political and social activities of black church congregations within a southern community by assessing the effectiveness of three churches in mobilizing their congregations and serving as channels for political communication. The study pays particular attention to the differences between affiliations within the black church, the influence of religious leaders on political involvement, attitudes regarding political involvement and political influences outside of the church. The thesis begins by placing the black church in its historical context —as a giver of spiritual and community orientation as well as a social and political mobilization agent. Using survey results from Catholic and Protestant congregations, it then considers how members of the Black Church acquire their political information, their political activity and whether members feel that their religious leaders are politically influential. Interviews with religious leaders will also consider if his or her beliefs and motivations equal those of the congregation. The results reveal that while there are variations across congregations, the black church is still politically important today
Normative Pragmatic Selfhood: A Pragmatist Conception of Value for Marginal Cases
I develop a theory of personal ontology called normative pragmatic selfhood (NPS) to explain what persons are and how they are morally valuable. I also demonstrate the applicability of NPS theory by using it to assess the moral status of marginal cases in bioethical dilemmas. I begin by discussing the concept of intrinsic value and why it is problematic when it comes to persons. I then draw upon John Dewey’s theory of value, specifically the concept of growth, and Kant’s concept of humanity to show that persons are objectively yet extrinsically valuable. Next, I discuss and argue how the psychological and narrative theories of identity are unable to justify the value of persons and how NPS theory succeeds in doing so. I conclude by showing how the application of NPS theory to marginal cases offers one way of thinking through these difficult bioethical issues
For Complex Orientations Preserving Power Operations, p-typicality is Atypical
We show, for primes p less than or equal to 13, that a number of well-known
MU_(p)-rings do not admit the structure of commutative MU_(p)-algebras. These
spectra have complex orientations that factor through the Brown-Peterson
spectrum and correspond to p-typical formal group laws. We provide computations
showing that such a factorization is incompatible with the power operations on
complex cobordism. This implies, for example, that if E is a Landweber exact
MU_(p)-ring whose associated formal group law is p-typical of positive height,
then the canonical map MU_(p) --> E is not a map of H_\infty ring spectra. It
immediately follows that the standard p-typical orientations on BP, E(n), and
E_n do not rigidify to maps of E_\infty ring spectra. We conjecture that
similar results hold for all primes.Comment: Minor revisions, results extended up to the prime 13. Accepted for
publication. 22 page
Taxes, lawyers, and the decline of witch trials in France
This paper explores the rise of the fiscal state in the early modern period and its impact on legal capacity. To measure legal capacity, we establish that witchcraft trials were more likely to take place where the central state had weak legal insti- tutions. Combining data on the geographic distribution of witchcraft trials with unique panel data on tax receipts across 21 French regions, we find that the rise of the tax state can account for much of the decline in witch trials during this period. Further historical evidence supports our hypothesis that higher taxes led to better legal institutions
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