7,506 research outputs found
What does the eclectic trade model say about the Samuelson conundrum?
Can growth of a trading partner harm a country? This paper seeks to answer this question through the use of an eclectic trade model which is similar in flavour to Markusen (1986). This paper makes two contributions. First, it develops a simple and tractable model of international trade based on a combination of imperfectcompetition, comparative advantage, and identical but non-homothetic preferences in a three country framework. Second, it uses this framework to consider the possibility of losses from partner-country growth in a free-trading environment. We find that the presence of nonhomothetic preferences in particular, leads to a home bias in consumption which dampens any negative welfare effects when a country's trading partners grow
Integrated equilibrium in a Heckscher-Ohlin-Ricardo model
This paper shows that, unlike in the Heckscher-Ohlin model, the integrated equilibrium in the Davis (1995) Heckscher-Ohlin-Ricardo model depends crucially on demand patterns. The area defining the integrated equilibrium is smaller, the greater is the weight placed by consumers on the good that has different technologies across countries
Estimating the production function of university students
This paper estimates the production function for university students in English universities. Taking as the output the quality of a university degree and the dropout rate, we use as inputs teaching quality and quantity, entry qualifications, and the effort level. Our results uncover new findings regarding the importance of each of these elements in university performance. In particular, we find that the quality of teaching and entry qualifications affect degree performance, but not the number of hours of teaching or private study. Controlling for unobserved ability through a 2SLS/GMM estimator suggests that entry scores have no additional impact on degree performance beyond its role as a measure of student ability.
What does the eclectic trade model say about the Samuelson conundrum?
Can growth of a trading partner harm a country? This paper seeks to answer this question through the use of an eclectic trade model which is similar in flavour to Markusen (1986). This paper makes two contributions. First, it develops a simple and tractable model of international trade based on a combination of imperfectcompetition, comparative advantage, and identical but non-homothetic preferences in a three country framework. Second, it uses this framework to consider the possibility of losses from partner-country growth in a free-trading environment. We find that the presence of nonhomothetic preferences in particular, leads to a home bias in consumption which dampens any negative welfare effects when a country's trading partners grow.
Integrated equilibrium in a Heckscher-Ohlin-Ricardo model
This paper shows that, unlike in the Heckscher-Ohlin model, the integrated equilibrium in the Davis (1995) Heckscher-Ohlin-Ricardo model depends crucially on demand patterns. The area defining the integrated equilibrium is smaller, the greater is the weight placed by consumers on the good that has different technologies across countries.
Some university students are more equal than others: Evidence from England
This paper estimates the efficiency of students in English universities using Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) and a new dataset which is able to capture the behaviour of university students. Taking as the output the classification of a university degree, we use as inputs teaching hours and quality, entry qualifications, and the effort level. We find that university students differ in terms of the efficiency with which they use inputs in producing good degrees. In a second stage, we explore the determinants of the efficiency of university students using a truncated regression model. Higher student efficiency is found to be positively and significantly related to university size, and negatively and significantly related to the proportion of part-time students and the number of academic staff. The quality of a university has no significant impact on the efficiency of its students once endogeneity of university quality is controlled for.
Is Lavelle-McMullan transformation a really new symmetry in QED?
Lavelle-McMullan symmetry of QED is examined at classical and quantum levels.
It is shown that Lavelle-McMullan symmetry does not give any new non-trivial
information in QED by examining the Ward-Takahashi identities. Being inspired
by the examination of Ward-Takahashi identity, we construct the generalized
non-local and non-covariant symmetries of QED.Comment: LATEX, 9 pages, two figures generated by Feynma
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