31,925 research outputs found
National and international freight transport models: overview and ideas for further development
This paper contains a review of the literature on freight transport models, focussing on the types of models that have been developed since the nineties for forecasting, policy simulation and project evaluation at the national and international level. Models for production, attraction, distribution, modal split and assignment are discussed in the paper. Furthermore, the paper also includes a number of ideas for future development, especially for the regional and urban components within national freight transport models
The Rocky Ride of Break-even-inflation rates.
The correlation matrix between break-even inflation rate movements and real interest rate movements across several countries shows puzzling features. Correlation is significantly positive for nearly all cross-border pairs whereas it is nil, positive or negative unsystematically within countries. By means of a correlation matrix decomposition, we provide an explanation for this puzzle.Inflation-linked bonds ; Break-even inflation rates
The Causality of Supply Relationships
This study examines the 'logic' or underlying causality of supply relationships. It develops and tests hypotheses, in a LISREL model, on detailed data for 553, 450 and 226 supply relationships in the US, Japanese and European automobile industries. The differences found between the three regions seem small, given the received view that there are fundamental differences between 'Japanese' and 'Western' contracting. However, the differences that remain suggest that in the US perhaps the 'Japanese system' has been surpassed, in a 'third way' that combines the advantages of sufficiently durable relations with the advantages of an open system with great variety.Automobile industries;Learning theory;Social exchange theory;Supply relationships;commitment
On Nonconservative Stability Problems of Elastic Systems with Slight Damping
Equilibrium stability of linear two degree of freedom system with slight viscous damping subjected to nonconservative loadin
How the Republic of Korea's financial structure affects the volatility of four asset prices
The authors explore how Korea's financial structure affects the volatility of asset prices. Documented empirical evidence of the relationship between financial structure and financial crisis, sheds light on the relationship between asset price volatility - extreme variations in price - and financial structure. And the volatility of financial and non-financial asset prices provides an indirect link between an economy's financial structure and the likelihood of financial crisis. Using time-series data on a se of indicators measuring financial structure, the authors examine how Korea's financial structure affects the volatility of the real effective exchange rate, the money market rate, government bond yields, and stock prices. They find: 1) There is a stable long-term relationship between financial structure and volatility in the real effective exchange rate, the money market rate, stock prices, and the yield on government housing bonds. 2) Financial structure affects asset price variables asymmetrically. Some variables'volatility increases, and others'diminish, suggesting that monetary policies should target different asset markets to achieve different goals. If the goal of the monetary authority is to stabilize the money market rate, for example, intervening in the banking sector is more efficient than intervening in other financial sub-sectors. 3) The higher volatility of stock prices reflects the thin stock market in Korea. 4) The stability of the yield on government housing bonds reflects the Korean government's policy of stabilizing the nation's housing supply by isolating the housing market from the impact of Korea's financial structure. 5) Restrictions on foreigners'ownership of domestic stock in Korea during the periodanalyzed, and the fact that most capital flows through commercial banks, affect the exchange rate, which is determined (at least in the short run) by capital flows in the foreign exchange market.Payment Systems&Infrastructure,Economic Theory&Research,Fiscal&Monetary Policy,Markets and Market Access,Banks&Banking Reform,Economic Theory&Research,Financial Economics,Access to Markets,Markets and Market Access,Banks&Banking Reform
The asymptotic regimes of tilted Bianchi II cosmologies
In this paper we give, for the first time, a complete description of the
dynamics of tilted spatially homogeneous cosmologies of Bianchi type II. The
source is assumed to be a perfect fluid with equation of state , where is a constant. We show that unless the perfect fluid is
stiff, the tilt destabilizes the Kasner solutions, leading to a Mixmaster-like
initial singularity, with the tilt being dynamically significant. At late times
the tilt becomes dynamically negligible unless the equation of state parameter
satisfies . We also find that the tilt does not destabilize
the flat FL model, with the result that the presence of tilt increases the
likelihood of intermediate isotropization
Jamming transition in a highly dense granular system under vertical vibration
The dynamics of the jamming transition in a three-dimensional granular system
under vertical vibration is studied using diffusing-wave spectroscopy. When the
maximum acceleration of the external vibration is large, the granular system
behaves like a fluid, with the dynamic correlation function G(t) relaxing
rapidly. As the acceleration of vibration approaches the gravitational
acceleration g, the relaxation of G(t) slows down dramatically, and eventually
stops. Thus the system undergoes a phase transition and behaves like a solid.
Near the transition point, we find that the structural relaxation shows a
stretched exponential behavior. This behavior is analogous to the behavior of
supercooled liquids close to the glass transition.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, accepted by Phys. Rev.
Determinants of poverty in Kenya : a household level analysis
poverty;statistical analysis;measurement;Kenya;household surveys
Lattice study of trapped fermions at unitarity
We present a lattice study of up to N=20 unitary fermions confined to a
harmonic trap. Our preliminary results show better than 1% agreement with high
precision solutions to the many-body Schrodinger equation for up to N=6. We are
able to make predictions for larger N which were inaccessible by the
Hamiltonian approach due to computational limitations. Harmonic traps are used
experimentally to study cold atoms tuned to a Feshbach resonance. We show that
they also provide certain benefits to numerical studies of many-body
correlators on the lattice. In particular, we anticipate that the methods
described here could be used for studying nuclear physics.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, presented at the XXVIII International Symposium
on Lattice Field Theory (Lattice 2010), Villasimius, Italy, June 14-19 201
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