130 research outputs found
Swedish regional GDP 1855-2000 : estimations and general trends in the Swedish regional system
This paper uses a method devised by Geary and Stark to estimate regional GDPs for 24 Swedish provinces 1855-2007. In empirical tests, we find that the Swedish estimations yield results of good precision, comparable to those reported in the international literature. From the literature, we generate six expectations concerning the development of regional GDPs in Sweden. Using the GDP estimations, we test these expectations empirically. We find that the historical regional GDPs show a high correlation over time, but that the early industrialization process co-evolved with a dramatic redistribution of productive capacity. We show that the regional inequalities in GDP per capita were at their lowest point in modern history in the early 1980s. However, while efficiency in the regional system has never been as equal, absolute regional differences in scale of production has increased dramatically over our investigated period. This process has especially benefited the metropolitan provinces. We also sketch a research agenda from our results.Industrialization, Regional inequality, Regional income, Economic growth
The Nonprofit Hospital Exemption of the National Labor Relations Act: Application to the University-Operated Hospital in Duke University
This work extends our recent work on proving that the particle filter converge for unbounded function to a more general case. More specifically, we prove that the particle filter converge for unbounded functions in the sense of L p-convergence, for an arbitrary p greater than 1. Related to this, we also provide proofs for the case when the function we are estimating is bounded. In the process of deriving the main result we also established a new Rosenthal type inequality
Electrification and energy productivity
Efficiency in energy use is crucial for sustainable development. We use cointegration analyses to investigate the effect of electricity on energy productivity in Swedish industry 1930-1990. Electricity augmented energy productivity in those industrial branches that used electricity for multiple purposes. This productivity effect goes beyond “book-keeping effects”, i. e. it is not only the result of electricity being produced in one sector (taking the energy transformation losses) and consumed in another (receiving the benefits).Energy; electricity; sustainable development; productivity
Development blocks and the second industrial revolution – Sweden 1900-1970
The paper explores development blocks around electrification at a 14 sector level in the Swedish economy 1900-1974. We suggest that long-run cointegration relations in combination with mutually Granger-causing short-run effects form a development block. One block centred on electricity that comprises five more sectors is found. In addition we demonstrate that increasing its electricity share makes a sector grow faster, and by testing the electricity share versus the growth rates we find another development block around electricity, party overlapping the first one.development block; electricity; GPT; second industrial revolution
Swedish regional GDP 1855-2000 : estimations and general trends in the Swedish regional system
This paper uses a method devised by Geary and Stark to estimate regional
GDPs for 24 Swedish provinces 1855-2007. In empirical tests, we find that
the Swedish estimations yield results of good precision, comparable to those
reported in the international literature. From the literature, we generate six
expectations concerning the development of regional GDPs in Sweden. Using
the GDP estimations, we test these expectations empirically. We find that the
historical regional GDPs show a high correlation over time, but that the early
industrialization process co-evolved with a dramatic redistribution of
productive capacity. We show that the regional inequalities in GDP per capita
were at their lowest point in modern history in the early 1980s. However,
while efficiency in the regional system has never been as equal, absolute
regional differences in scale of production has increased dramatically over our
investigated period. This process has especially benefited the metropolitan
provinces. We also sketch a research agenda from our results
Swedish regional GDP 1855–2000: Estimations and general trends in the Swedish regional system
This paper uses a method devised by Geary and Stark to estimate regional GDPs for 24 Swedish provinces 1855-2007. In empirical tests, we find that the Swedish estimations yield results of good precision, comparable to those reported in the international literature. From the literature, we generate six expectations concerning the development of regional GDPs in Sweden. Using the GDP estimations, we test these expectations empirically. We find that the historical regional GDPs show a high correlation over time, but that the early industrialization process co-evolved with a dramatic redistribution of productive capacity. We show that the regional inequalities in GDP per capita were at their lowest point in modern history in the early 1980s. However, while efficiency in the regional system has never been as equal, absolute regional differences in scale of production has increased dramatically over our investigated period. This process has especially benefited the metropolitan provinces. We present detailed sources of our estimations and also sketch a research agenda from our results
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