8,675 research outputs found
Private provision of public goods and information diffusion in social groups
We describe a model of fundraising in social groups, where private information about quality of provision is transmitted by social proximity. Individuals engage in voluntary provision of a pure collective good that is consumed by both neighbours and non-neighbours. We show that, unlike in the case of private goods, better informed individuals face positive incentives to incur a
cost to share information with their neighbours. These incentives are stronger, and provision of the pure public good greater, the smaller are individuals’ social
neighbourhoods
Scale economies in nonprofit provision, technology adoption and entry
We study competition between nonprofit providers that supply a collective
service through increasing-returns-to-scale technologies under conditions
of free entry. When providers adopt a not-for-profit mission, the
absence of a residual claimant can impede entry, protecting the position
of an inefficient incumbent. Moreover, when providers supply goods
that are at least partly public in nature, they may be unable to sustain the
adoption of more efficient technologies that feature fixed costs, because
buyers (private donors) face individual incentives to divert donations towards
charities that adopt inferior, lower-fixed-cost technologies. These
incentives may give rise to a technological race to the bottom, where nonprofit
providers forgo opportunities to exploit scale economies. In these
situations, government grants in support of core costs can have a nonneutral
effect on entry, technology adoption, and industry performance
The price elasticity of charitable giving : does the form of tax relief matter?
This paper uses a survey-based approach to test alternative methods of channeling tax relief to donors – as a tax rebate for the donor or as a matched payment to the receiving charity. On accounting grounds these two are equivalent but, in line with earlier experimental studies, we find that gross donations are significantly more responsive to a match change than to a rebate change. We show that the difference can largely be explained by the fact that a majority of donors do not adjust their nominal donations in response to a change in subsidy. This evidence adds to the growing empirical literature suggesting that consumers may not react to tax changes. In the case of tax subsidies for donations, this has implications for policy design – for the UK a match-based system is likely to be more effective at increasing money going to charities
Interaction of iron oxide nanoparticles synthesized by laser target evaporation with polyacrylamide in composites and ferrogels
Received: 05.06.2017; accepted: 20.06.2017;published: 14.07.2017.Iron oxide magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) with average diameter 11.7 nm synthesized by laser target evaporation were used for the synthesis of composites and ferrogels based on polyacrylamide network. The chemical composition of MNPs corresponded to maghemite. It was shown that intact MNPs strongly interacted with polyacrylamide polymeric network, while the adsorption of electrostatic stabilizer on the surface of MNPs efficiently prevents such interaction. Synthesis of ferrogels was performed by the radical polymerization of acrylamide in electrostatically stabilized suspensions of MNPs in water. It was shown that the molecular structure, water uptake, and compression modulus can be controlled by the concentration of monomer taken in the synthesis
ON THE MEASUREMENT OF A COSMOLOGICAL DIPOLE IN THE PHOTON NUMBER COUNTS OF GAMMA-RAY BURSTS
If gamma-ray bursts are cosmological or in a halo distribution their
properties are expected to be isotropic (at least to 1st order). However, our
motion with respect to the burst parent population (whose proper frame is
expected to be that of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB), or that of a
static halo) will cause a dipole effect in the distribution of bursts and in
their photon number counts (together termed a Compton-Getting effect). We argue
that the photon number count information is necessary to distinguish a genuine
Compton-Getting effect from some other anisotropy and to fully test the proper
frame isotropy of the bursts. Using the 2B burst catalogue and the dipole
determined from the CMB, we find the surprising result that although the number
weighted distribution is consistent with isotropy, the fluence weighted dipole
has a correlation with the CMB dipole that has a probability of occuring only
10% of the time for an isotropic photon distribution. Furthermore, the photon
and number dipoles are inconsistent under the hypothesis of isotropy, at the
2-sigma level. This could be an indication that a non-negligible fraction of
gamma-ray bursts originate in the local, anisotropic universe. (shortened
Abstract)Comment: Accepted by ApJ. Self-unpacking (use csh), uuencoded, compressed
Postscript, 16 pages + 4 Figures (5 files
Tiebout with Politics: Capital Tax Competition and Constitutional Choices.
This paper examines how capital tax competition affects jurisdiction formation. We describe a locational model of public goods provision, where jurisdictions are represented by coalitions of consumers with similar tastes, and where the levels of taxation and local public goods provision within jurisdictions are selected by majority voting. We show that in this setting interjurisdictional tax competition results in an enlargement of jurisdictional boundaries, and can raise welfare for all members of a jurisdiction even in the absence of intrajurisdictional transfers.
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