5,612 research outputs found
Public Opinions on Inter-Korean Economic Cooperation: A Survey Analysis
This research attempts to provide an in-depth analysis of the public perceptions of inter-Korean economic cooperation. KDI survey data with a sample size of 1,000 were subjected to empirical analyses. By means of ordered logit estimations, we derive the following results. First, there is a significant effect of age on economic cooperation perceptions, where younger generations tend to be more negative. Second, the group who has positive view on the economic cooperation tends to prefer large-scale, domestic-entity-funded cooperation projects, whereas the group who has negative view tends to prefer small-scale projects and projects funded by international organizations. According to these results, prioritizing trade with the involvement of international organizations is likely to be an effective measure to alleviate potential political constraints and to achieve sustainable long-run economic cooperation systems when pursuing the economic cooperation
Impacts of rural development policies on farm households in South Korea
PhD ThesisFollowing an increase in the openness of the South Korean economy since the mid-1990s, farm households have experienced a decrease in their real farm incomes. Hence, over the last decade the Korean government has adopted a variety of rural policy measures, which mostly support community enterprises, to increase the non-farm incomes of farm households and to support rural development. The aim of this study is to explore the major impacts of some key rural development policy measures that aim to boost non-farm activities of farm households in South Korea.
This research employed a combination of both quantitative and qualitative techniques. First, an exploratory online survey of farmers provided insights into the most helpful rural policy measures across different regions. Then, face-to-face interviews with 14 key informants helped to narrow the focus of the study down to four main policy measures. Finally, face-to-face in-depth interviews with 48 farmers were used to explore the impacts that these measures have had on farm households and the communities to which they belong.
Findings from this study reveal that these four policy measures have all succeeded, to varying degrees, in promoting farmers‟ participation in community enterprises. This in turn has led to an increase in household incomes and also to a range of non-financial benefits such as improved skills and better access to social networks. Community enterprises that are supported by rural development policies are argued to be more successful when supported by effective partnership and leadership, along with appropriately designed support services. The support services currently offered by these policy measures are generally found to be less helpful than improvements to physical assets and in some cases they appear not to respond to the needs of the community businesses that they seek to help. Farm households with higher levels of assets are found to benefit more from these measures and access to financial capital is found to be particularly influential in this respect. This study recommends that the design of future rural policies could be improved to increase participation in community enterprises by making them more accessible to households that do not have the financial means to support co-financing and by including a range of measures (e.g. around partnership, capacity building and advice) designed to improve their impact on rural livelihoods.Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs in South Kore
Terrace solutions for non-Lipschitz multistable nonlinearities
Traveling wave solutions of reaction-diffusion equations are well-studied for
Lipschitz continuous monostable and bistable reaction functions. These special
solutions play a key role in mathematical biology and in particular in the
study of ecological invasions. However, if there are more than two stable
steady states, the invasion phenomenon may become more intricate and involve
intermediate steps, which leads one to consider not a single but a collection
of traveling waves with ordered speeds. In this paper we show that, if the
reaction function is discontinuous at the stable steady states, then such a
collection of traveling waves exists and even provides a special solution which
we call a terrace solution. More precisely, we will address both the existence
and uniqueness of the terrace solution
Dynamical mean-field theory of Hubbard-Holstein model at half-filling: Zero temperature metal-insulator and insulator-insulator transitions
We study the Hubbard-Holstein model, which includes both the
electron-electron and electron-phonon interactions characterized by and
, respectively, employing the dynamical mean-field theory combined with
Wilson's numerical renormalization group technique. A zero temperature phase
diagram of metal-insulator and insulator-insulator transitions at half-filling
is mapped out which exhibits the interplay between and . As () is
increased, a metal to Mott-Hubbard insulator (bipolaron insulator) transition
occurs, and the two insulating states are distinct and can not be adiabatically
connected. The nature of and transitions between the three states are
discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. Submitted to Physical Review Letter
Investigation of the transverse beam dynamics in the thermal wave model with a functional method
We investigated the transverse beam dynamics in a thermal wave model by using
a functional method. It can describe the beam optical elements separately with
a kernel for a component. The method can be applied to general quadrupole
magnets beyond a thin lens approximation as well as drift spaces. We found that
the model can successfully describe the PARMILA simulation result through an
FODO lattice structure for the Gaussian input beam without space charge
effects.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure
Determinants Of Enforcement Action By The Financial Supervisory Service Of Korea From The Perspective Of Audit Firms
In this study, we examine the determinants of enforcement action by the Financial Supervisory Service of Korea from the perspective of audit firms. Enforcement action is an indication of audit failure. Both client- and audit firm-specific factors are involved in its occurrence. Most published studies of enforcement after audit failure focus on client characteristics because details about audit firms from financial statements and information about organizational structure are not publicly available. However, examining the issues surrounding enforcement from the perspective of audit firms may also be valuable in elucidating the potential determinants of audit failure resulting in enforcement action. Utilizing publicly available data from audit firms in South Korea, we identify several audit firm characteristics as determinants of enforcement action. The results of our empirical analysis reveal that the likelihood of audit failure is positively associated with the ratio of accounts receivable to total assets, the ratio of audit fees to total revenue, the ratio of partners to the total number of CPAs, CEO ownership, and age of audit firms. In addition, the likelihood of audit failure is negatively associated with ownership concentration and profitability. These associations are more pronounced in non-affiliated audit firms than affiliated audit firms. Several useful implications for regulators are described for improving audit quality by means of enforcement action
Estimation of an Examinee's Ability in the Web-Based Computerized Adaptive Testing Program IRT-CAT
We developed a program to estimate an examinee s ability in order to provide freely available access to a web-based computerized adaptive testing (CAT) program. We used PHP and Java Script as the program languages, PostgresSQL as the database management system on an Apache web server and Linux as the operating system. A system which allows for user input and searching within inputted items and creates tests was constructed. We performed an ability estimation on each test based on a Rasch model and 2- or 3-parametric logistic models. Our system provides an algorithm for a web-based CAT, replacing previous personal computer-based ones, and makes it possible to estimate an examinee's ability immediately at the end of test
Batalin-Tyutin Quantization of the Chiral Schwinger Model
We quantize the chiral Schwinger Model by using the Batalin-Tyutin formalism.
We show that one can systematically construct the first class constraints and
the desired involutive Hamiltonian, which naturally generates all secondary
constraints. For , this Hamiltonian gives the gauge invariant Lagrangian
including the well-known Wess-Zumino terms, while for the corresponding
Lagrangian has the additional new type of the Wess-Zumino terms, which are
irrelevant to the gauge symmetry.Comment: 15 pages, latex, no figures, to be published in Z. Phys. C (1995
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