7,973 research outputs found
Women in the Workplace: Which Women, Which Agenda?
Much of the work family literature that has blossomed over the last decade has focused on professional women and has emphasized policy changes that would be of less utility to many other working women and men. In this symposium contribution, we explore the recent data on working time to demonstrate that in today\u27s economy more women are underemployed rather than overemployed. We also demonstrate that although professional women tend to work the longest hours, they also tend to have the greatest means, both in income and workplace benefits, to support them in achieving a workable balance between their work and family demands. We discuss the most prominent policy proposals for helping attain this balance, including a greater emphasis on part-time work and shorter workweeks, and critique them for their failure to address the needs of most working women. Finally, we suggest several alternative proposals, including lengthening school days, addressing domestic violence, and challenging the stubborn gender norms that prevent further progress for equality in both the workplace and the home
Are Trump and Bitcoin Good Partners?
During times of extreme market turmoil, it is acknowledged that there is a
tendency towards "flight to safety". A strong (weak) safe haven is defined as
an asset that has a significant positive (negative) return in periods where
another asset is in distress, while hedge has to be negatively correlated
(uncorrelated) on average. The Bitcoin's surge alongside the aftermath of
Trump's win in the 2016 U.S. presidential elections has strengthened its status
as the modern safe haven. This paper uses a truly noise-assisted data analysis
method, termed as Ensemble Empirical Mode Decomposition-based approach, to
examine whether Bitcoin can act as a hedge and safe haven for U.S. stock price
index. The results document that the Bitcoin's safe-haven property is
time-varying and that it has primarily been a weak safe haven in the short term
and the long-term. We also demonstrate that precious metals lost their safe
haven properties over time as the correlation between gold/silver and U.S.
stock price declines from short-to long-run horizons
The Changing Geopolitics in the Arab World: Implications of the 2017 Gulf Crisis for Business
The international community was caught by surprise on 5 June 2017 when Saudi
Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Bahrain and Egypt severed diplomatic
ties with Qatar, accusing it of destabilizing the region. More than one year
after this diplomatic rift, several questions remain unaddressed. This study
focuses on the regional business costs of the year-long blockade on Qatar. We
split the sample to compare the stock market performances of Qatar and its
Middle Eastern neighbors before and after the Saudi-led Qatar boycott. We focus
our attention on the conditional volatility process of stock market returns and
risks related to financial interconnectedness. We show that the Gulf crisis had
the most adverse impact on Qatar together with Saudi Arabia and the UAE.
Although not to the same degree as these three countries, Bahrain and Egypt
were also harmfully affected. But shocks to the volatility process tend to have
short-lasting effects. Moreover, the total volatility spillovers to and from
others increase but moderately after the blockade. Overall, the quartet
lobbying efforts did not achieve the intended result. Our findings underscore
Qatar's economic vulnerability but also the successful resilience strategy of
this tiny state. The coordinated diplomatic efforts of Qatar have been able to
fight the economic and political embargo
Hedging large risks reduces the transaction costs
As soon as one accepts to abandon the zero-risk paradigm of Black-Scholes,
very interesting issues concerning risk control arise because different
definitions of the risk become unequivalent. Optimal hedges then depend on the
quantity one wishes to minimize. We show that a definition of the risk more
sensitive to the extreme events generically leads to a decrease both of the
probability of extreme losses and of the sensitivity of the hedge on the price
of the underlying (the `Gamma'). Therefore, the transaction costs and the
impact of hedging on the price dynamics of the underlying are reduced.Comment: 8 pages, 3 .eps figures. Submitted to RISK magazin
Statistical Inequality and Intentional (Not Implicit) Discrimination
Racial disparities remain a disturbing fact of American life but whether those disparities are the product of discrimination remains deeply contested. This is an important question because as a society we are committed to remedying discrimination but are significantly more conflicted over addressing racial disparities that are not tied to discrimination. This essay explores the question of how we can determine when statistical disparities are the product of discrimination, and relies on two areas where the presence of racial disparities are incontrovertible – police automobile stops and school discipline. Based on a large number of studies, there is little question that African-American drivers are stopped and searched more frequently than whites, even though contraband is found more commonly on white drivers. Similarly, based on studies dating to the 1970s, African-American students are suspended and expelled at rates that are generally three times as high as white students, and there is little reason to believe that the disparities are solely explained by the behavior of African-American students. After refuting the nondiscriminatory explanations that are often offered to justify the disparities, the last part of the essay urges policymakers to treat repeated patterns of behavior as intentional, as opposed to implicit, discrimination, and offers a critique of the recent turn to implicit bias
Embedding a -invariant code into a complete one
Let A be a finite or countable alphabet and let be a literal
(anti-)automorphism onto A * (by definition, such a correspondence is
determinated by a permutation of the alphabet). This paper deals with sets
which are invariant under (-invariant for short) that is,
languages L such that (L) is a subset of L.We establish an extension
of the famous defect theorem. With regards to the so-called notion of
completeness, we provide a series of examples of finite complete
-invariant codes. Moreover, we establish a formula which allows to
embed any non-complete -invariant code into a complete one. As a
consequence, in the family of the so-called thin --invariant codes,
maximality and completeness are two equivalent notions.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1705.0556
Olağanüstü olay Ferhad ile Şirin
Taha Toros Arşivi, Dosya Adı: Nazım Hikmet. Not: Gazetenin "Görüş" köşesinde yayımlanmıştır.İstanbul Kalkınma Ajansı (TR10/14/YEN/0033) İstanbul Development Agency (TR10/14/YEN/0033
Müzik:Ferdi Statzer ve konservatuvar'da piyano eğitimi
Taha Toros Arşivi, Dosya No: 136-Ferdi Ştatze
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