8 research outputs found

    Remarks at the VCCS Hire Ed Conference (2017)

    Get PDF

    Report of the town offices Mont Vernon, New Hampshire for the year ending December 31, 2018 and of the school district offices for the year ending June 30, 2018.

    Get PDF
    This is an annual report containing vital statistics for a town/city in the state of New Hampshire

    Report of the town offices Mont Vernon, New Hampshire for the year ending December 31, 2012 and of the school district offices for the year ending June 30, 2012.

    Get PDF
    This is an annual report containing vital statistics for a town/city in the state of New Hampshire

    Report of the town offices Mont Vernon, New Hampshire for the year ending December 31, 2021 and of the school district offices for the year ending June 30, 2021.

    Get PDF
    This is an annual report containing vital statistics for a town/city in the state of New Hampshire

    Environmental Regulation and Industry Location in Europe

    Get PDF
    This paper estimates the effect of environmental regulation on industry location and compares it with other determinants of location such as agricultural, education and R&D country characteristics. The analysis is based on a general empirical trade model that captures the interaction between country and industry characteristics in determining industry location. The Johnson–Neyman technique is used to fully explicate the nature of the conditional interactions. The model is applied to data on 16 manufacturing industries from 13 European countries. The empirical results indicate that the pollution haven effect is present and that the relative strength of such an effect is of about the same magnitude as other determinants of industry location. A significant negative effect on industry location is observed only at relatively high levels of industry pollution intensity

    Vertical Production Networks: Evidence from France

    No full text
    This paper investigates the determinants of intra-firm trade of multinational firms located in France, using data on French companies. Results on the vertical pattern of production networks differ according to the affiliates? location. Lower wage and transportation costs in the developing countries increase, as expected, the vertical segmentation of production. In the developed countries, lower trade and unit wage costs, and hence, a strong and positive labour productivity matter a lot in explaining French MNCs? preferences. Among the other variables of interest, partnership and market potential have been given special attention. The results substantiate a mix of vertical and horizontal FDI, mainly when we separate out capital intensive from labour intensive intermediate products
    corecore