1,747 research outputs found
"Collective Risk Control And Group Security: The Unexpected Consequences of Differential Risk Aversion"
We provide an analysis of odds-improving self-protection for when it yields collective benefits to groups, such as alliances of nations, for whom risks of loss are public bads and prevention of loss is a public good. Our analysis of common risk reduction shows how diminishing returns in risk improvement can be folded into income effects. These income effects then imply that whether protection is inferior or normal depends on the risk aversion characteristics of underlying utility functions, and on the interaction between these, the level of risk, and marginal effectiveness of risk abatement. We demonstrate how public good inferiority is highly likely when the good is "group risk reduction." In fact, we discover a natural or endogenous limit on the size of a group and of the amount of risk controlling outlay it will provide under Nash behavior. We call this limit an "Inferior Goods Barrier" to voluntary risk reduction. For the paradigm case of declining risk aversion, increases in group size/wealth will cause provision of more safety to change from a normal to an inferior good thereby creating such a barrier.
Mancur Lloyd Olson, Jr. 1932-1998 Personal Recollections
This article memorializes the life and professional work of Mancur Lloyd Olson, Jr. The forty-two years of Mancur Olson's scholarly life were devoted to an inspiring pursuit of his vision of "macro." His ideas may occupy the core of macroeconomics fifty or one hundred years from now, or they may signify only one strand, but surely they will be present and influential in all future study of economics, of society and of interactions between them. Here in 1998, we don't know. But we do know that economists, political scientists, sociologists, and whatever other new disciplinary clusters emerge in social science will be studying Mancur Olson's ideas and learning from his insights--valuing the Collective Good which his life's work has left to all.Mancur Olson
Vibrational Satellites of CS, CS, and CS: Microwave Spectral Taxonomy as a Stepping Stone to the Millimeter-Wave Band
We present a microwave spectral taxonomy study of several hydrocarbon/CS
discharge mixtures in which more than 60 distinct chemical species, their more
abundant isotopic species, and/or their vibrationally excited states were
detected using chirped-pulse and cavity Fourier-transform microwave
spectroscopies. Taken together, in excess of 85 unique variants were detected,
including several new isotopic species and more than 25 new vibrationally
excited states of CS, CS, and CS, which have been assigned on the
basis of published vibration-rotation interaction constants for CS, or
newly calculated ones for CS and CS. On the basis of these precise,
low-frequency measurements, several vibrationally exited states of CS and
CS were subsequently identified in archival millimeter-wave data in the
253--280 GHz frequency range, ultimately providing highly accurate catalogs for
astronomical searches. As part of this work, formation pathways of the two
smaller carbon-sulfur chains were investigated using C isotopic
spectroscopy, as was their vibrational excitation. The present study
illustrates the utility of microwave spectral taxonomy as a tool for complex
mixture analysis, and as a powerful and convenient `stepping stone' to higher
frequency measurements in the millimeter and submillimeter bands.Comment: Accepted in PCC
A Laboratory Study of C_3H^+ and the C_3H Radical in Three New Vibrationally Excited ^2Σ States Using a Pin-Hole Nozzle Discharge Source
Rotational lines of the positive molecular ion C_3H^+ and of the neutral C_3H radical in three new vibrationally excited states with ^2Σ symmetry have been detected in a supersonic molecular beam in the centimeter-wave band. The fundamental rotational line of the ion is quite weak, but is observed with similar intensity in a dc discharge through several different hydrocarbon gases when helium is the buffer gas. Under these conditions, the fractional abundance of C_3H^+ relative to C_3H is estimated to be of order 10^(−4), i.e., toward the lower end of the ratio (10^(−3)–10^(−4)) found for protonated ions using the same discharge nozzle. For each new ^2Σ state of the C_3H radical, spectroscopic constants, including those describing hydrogen hyperfine structure, have been determined to high precision. Lines of one ^2Σ state (B = 11271 MHz) are particularly intense in our molecular beam; for this state and a second one (B = 11306 MHz), millimeter-wave transitions have also been observed between 180 and 340 GHz using a long path dc glow absorption spectrometer. On the basis of intensity measurements with this spectrometer, the inferred rotation–vibration constant α, and theoretical calculations, the state with B = 11271 MHz is tentatively assigned to the ν_5 bending mode, predicted to lie ~300 cm^(−1) above ground
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