1,334 research outputs found
Of Republicans and Recessions: Why Does Big Business Vote for Them?
[Excerpt] The wild enthusiasm business gave Nixon\u27s new economic policy stems not only from a longstanding business preference for Republicans but a short-run expectation of profit windfalls. In a moment of economic crisis the President turned to business to clear up America\u27s problems. In fact, if the record of the last quarter-century is to be believed, not only will the nation\u27s trouble remain unsolved but business will not get the anticipated bonanza either. The politics of business is clearly Republican, but it is not so clear that the Republican Party is good for business
Criteria to monitor the poverty alleviation, empowerment and institutional performance of equity-share schemes in South African agriculture
This paper extends a previous study in South Africa aimed at developing methodology for assessing the performance of equity-share schemes. The previous study proposed four broad criteria to measure performance: poverty alleviation; empowerment and participation; institutional arrangements and governance; and financial performance. This paper does not aim to assess the performance of existing equity-share schemes but to develop a methodology for the first three criteria based on empirical analysis of data gathered in 2004 from a land reform project in the Midlands of KwaZulu-Natal and seven established equity-share schemes in the Western Cape. Poverty alleviation is measured using a transition matrix of households grouped by four different symptoms of poverty: current income, wealth, health and a principal component index of housing quality. Eight categories of indicators are recommended for empowerment and participation: control and ownership; skills transfer; understanding; information; outcomes; trust; outreach; and participation. A scorecard applying norms based on empirical evidence gathered at the equity-share schemes in the Western Cape is used to test the indicators. A scorecard approach is also applied to institutional arrangements and governance, which are measured using three categories of indicators: accountability, transparency and property rights. The proposed performance measures are relevant, manageable in number and have feasible norms based on empirical evidence. These indicators and their norms need to be tested on a wider scale and monitored over time. Future research should be undertaken to determine weights for the empowerment and institutional indicators.Food Security and Poverty,
Measuring the performance of equity-share schemes in South African agriculture: A focus on financial criteria
This study aims to develop a robust methodology for measuring financial performance of equity-share schemes. Several studies have investigated various aspects of performance of these schemes but no single study has yet measured their performance using an objective set of criteria. Four categories of such objective criteria are proposed: poverty alleviation; empowerment and participation; institutional arrangements and governance; and financial performance. This paper focuses only on the financial performance criteria. Recognised indicators of financial performance are applied to balance sheet and income statement data provided by four equity-share schemes in the Western Cape province. This analysis highlights problems with several of the conventional ratios used to measure profitability, solvency and growth when they are applied to recently restructured farming enterprises whose 'empowerment' status attracts exceptionally high levels of debt capital to finance long-term investments. To avoid these problems it is recommended that, for equity-share schemes, profitability should be measured by the return on assets or dividend return; solvency by the debt/asset ratio; liquidity by cash flow projections; growth by changes in the (estimated) real value of shares; and workers' total returns by changes in the sum of the real wage bill, capital gains, dividends, interest and other benefits accruing to workers in aggregate.Agricultural Finance,
Study of Two-Proton Pickup Using the (6-Li,8-B) Reaction
This work was supported by National Science Foundation Grants PHY 76-84033A01, PHY 78-22774, and Indiana Universit
Countable locally 2-arc-transitive bipartite graphs
We present an order-theoretic approach to the study of countably infinite
locally 2-arc-transitive bipartite graphs. Our approach is motivated by
techniques developed by Warren and others during the study of cycle-free
partial orders. We give several new families of previously unknown countably
infinite locally-2-arc-transitive graphs, each family containing continuum many
members. These examples are obtained by gluing together copies of incidence
graphs of semilinear spaces, satisfying a certain symmetry property, in a
tree-like way. In one case we show how the classification problem for that
family relates to the problem of determining a certain family of highly
arc-transitive digraphs. Numerous illustrative examples are given.Comment: 29 page
Src homology 2 domain containing protein 5 (SH2D5) binds the breakpoint cluster region protein, BCR, and regulates levels of Rac1-GTP
SH2D5 is a mammalian-specific, uncharacterized adaptor-like protein that contains an N-terminal phosphotyrosine binding (PTB) domain and a C-terminal Src Homology 2 (SH2) domain. We show that SH2D5 is highly enriched in adult mouse brain, particularly in purkinjie cells in the cerebellum and the cornu ammonis of the hippocampus. Despite harboring two potential phosphotyrosine (pTyr) recognition domains, SH2D5 binds minimally to pTyr ligands, consistent with the absence of a conserved pTyr-binding arginine residue in the SH2 domain. Immunoprecipitation coupled to mass spectrometry (IP-MS) from cultured cells revealed a prominent association of SH2D5 with Breakpoint Cluster Region protein (BCR), a RacGAP that is also highly expressed in brain. This interaction occurred between the PTB domain of SH2D5 and an NxxF motif located within the N-terminal region of BCR. siRNA-mediated depletion of SH2D5 in a neuroblastoma cell line, B35, induced a cell rounding phenotype correlated with low levels of activated Rac1-GTP, suggesting that SH2D5 affects Rac1-GTP levels. Taken together, our data provide the first characterization of the SH2D5 signaling protein
Phase-field-crystal models for condensed matter dynamics on atomic length and diffusive time scales: an overview
Here, we review the basic concepts and applications of the
phase-field-crystal (PFC) method, which is one of the latest simulation
methodologies in materials science for problems, where atomic- and microscales
are tightly coupled. The PFC method operates on atomic length and diffusive
time scales, and thus constitutes a computationally efficient alternative to
molecular simulation methods. Its intense development in materials science
started fairly recently following the work by Elder et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 88
(2002), p. 245701]. Since these initial studies, dynamical density functional
theory and thermodynamic concepts have been linked to the PFC approach to serve
as further theoretical fundaments for the latter. In this review, we summarize
these methodological development steps as well as the most important
applications of the PFC method with a special focus on the interaction of
development steps taken in hard and soft matter physics, respectively. Doing
so, we hope to present today's state of the art in PFC modelling as well as the
potential, which might still arise from this method in physics and materials
science in the nearby future.Comment: 95 pages, 48 figure
Resource Allocation in a National Dental Service Using Program Budgeting Marginal Analysis
Introduction: In any health system, choices must be made about the allocation of resources (budget), which are often scarce. Economics has defined frameworks to aid resource allocation, and program budgeting marginal analysis (PBMA) is one such framework. In principle, patient and public values can be incorporated into these frameworks, using techniques such as willingness to pay (WTP). However, this has not been done before, and few formal resource allocation processes have been undertaken in dentistry. This study aimed to undertake a PBMA with embedded WTP values in a national dental setting.
Methods: The PBMA process was undertaken by a panel of participant-researchers representing commissioners, dentists, dental public health staff, and academics. The panel reviewed current allocations and generated a set of weighted criteria to evaluate services against. Services to be considered for removal and investment were determined by the panel and wider discussion and then scored against the criteria. Values from a nationally representative WTP survey of the public contributed to the scores for interventions. Final decisions on removal and investment were taken after panel discussion using individual anonymous electronic voting.
Results: The PBMA process resulted in recommendations to invest in new program components to improve access to general dentists, care home dentistry, and extra support for dental public health input into local government decisions. Disinvestments were recommended in orthodontics and to remove routine scaling and polishing of teeth. Discussion: The PBMA process was successful in raising awareness of resource allocation issues. Implementation of findings will depend on the ability of decision makers to find ways of operationalizing the decisions. The process illustrates practical aspects of the process that future dental PBMAs could learn from.
Knowledge Transfer Statement: This study illustrates a framework for resource allocation in dental health services and will aid decision makers in implementing their own resource allocation systems
Resource Allocation in a National Dental Service Using Program Budgeting Marginal Analysis
Introduction:
In any health system, choices must be made about the allocation of resources (budget), which are often scarce. Economics has defined frameworks to aid resource allocation, and program budgeting marginal analysis (PBMA) is one such framework. In principle, patient and public values can be incorporated into these frameworks, using techniques such as willingness to pay (WTP). However, this has not been done before, and few formal resource allocation processes have been undertaken in dentistry. This study aimed to undertake a PBMA with embedded WTP values in a national dental setting.
Methods:
The PBMA process was undertaken by a panel of participant-researchers representing commissioners, dentists, dental public health staff, and academics. The panel reviewed current allocations and generated a set of weighted criteria to evaluate services against. Services to be considered for removal and investment were determined by the panel and wider discussion and then scored against the criteria. Values from a nationally representative WTP survey of the public contributed to the scores for interventions. Final decisions on removal and investment were taken after panel discussion using individual anonymous electronic voting.
Results:
The PBMA process resulted in recommendations to invest in new program components to improve access to general dentists, care home dentistry, and extra support for dental public health input into local government decisions. Disinvestments were recommended in orthodontics and to remove routine scaling and polishing of teeth.
Discussion:
The PBMA process was successful in raising awareness of resource allocation issues. Implementation of findings will depend on the ability of decision makers to find ways of operationalizing the decisions. The process illustrates practical aspects of the process that future dental PBMAs could learn from.
Knowledge Transfer Statement:
This study illustrates a framework for resource allocation in dental health services and will aid decision makers in implementing their own resource allocation systems
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