1,055 research outputs found

    Economics of the Firm and Economic Growth. An hybrid theoretical framework of analysis

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    The characterization of individual firms is an essential step toward the study of the behaviour of industries and other more aggregated units of economics, and so to the analysis of economic growth processes. Hence, the main goal of this study is to achieve a critical discussion around the conceptualisation of the firm and its role in the dynamical process of economic growth. The approach to the main topic starts with the construction of a theoretical matrix of the economics of the firm, opening with the two major traditions of institutionalist thought in economics, and evolving then towards some considerations around the contractual and the evolutionary approaches. Another important theoretical stream that deals with organizations in economic and sociological terms also appears, the population ecology approach. After this overview, it is developed a cross-exam of distinct theoretical perspectives and the identification of possible flaws of the neoclassical theory. This confrontation, which goes throughout many imperative and controversial issues within economics such as the nature of the firm and the cognitive capacities of economic agents, results in a systematisation about the impact of this discussion on economic growth. The conclusions appear as crucial to develop further research aiming the construction of economic growth models based on a microeconomics that is closer to the reality of firms.Firm; Economic Growth; Institutionalism; Evolutionary theory; Contractual Theory; Ecology Population Theory.

    Surveying structural change: seminal contributions and a bibliometric account

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    The main aim of this paper is to provide a comprehensive survey of the economic literature on structural change. Along with an insightful literature review of the seminal contributions in the field, we perform a quantitative analysis that takes into account all the theoretical and empirical articles on the subject that were published from 1969 onwards. This effort to gather the relevant documentation is based on a review of 910 abstracts from articles published in all the economic journals found in the Econlit database over the past forty years. According to our quantitative analysis, structural change analysis received a major boost in the 1990s, with a considerable increase in the number of articles published on the matter. The marked rise in interest seems to be primarily related to the growing concern to find explanations for the process of technological change and its effects on the economy. In the first half of the current decade technological change comprises a predominant area of research, accounting for about one quarter of the articles published. Despite the increased formalism observed in the 1990s, our results further highlight that the bulk of the research in this field remains empirically led. Furthermore, and quite surprisingly, discussions concerning ICTs do not seem to have been translated so far into a substantial increase in research on structural change-related issues.Structural Change; Bibliometrics; Econlit

    A model of the learning process with local knowledge externalities illustrated with an integrated graphical framework

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    In this paper we present a theoretical model of the learning process with knowledge externalities to R&D and other learning inputs within a region, a technological district, an industry or a technological cluster with fast rates of accumulation of new technological knowledge. As there are several definitions of localized technological and learning opportunities (according to the technical space, or to the regional space) and of localized technological knowledge, we can therefore find several possible applications to the generic model. The analysis of the learning firm interacting with a specific region in the production of new technological knowledge is just one of them. The analytical model we develop is amenable to a graphical representation. Thus we provide in the first place a unifying graphical framework, consisting of a four-quadrant picture to analyze the process of knowledge accumulation by learning firms located and operating in a specific region or industry, which simultaneously stresses the nature of the basic learning process and the importance of true knowledge spillovers in the generation of new knowledge. We adopt the following approach to the construction of spillover stocks or pools. First, the magnitude of the state of aggregate knowledge in a region or industry is reconstructed through the historic accumulation of flows of knowledge. Thus, the aggregate level of knowledge can always be updated after every learning loop, or at every moment of discrete time, whose unit of measurement we might assume at the outset of our analysis. Secondly, every firm within a region or industry is treated symmetrically regarding spillover effects and magnitudes. Such statement meaning that the amount of aggregate knowledge borrowed from any available source, either the region or industry under analysis or some other distant region or industry, is regarded as the same by every firm. And finally, we model both the loss of appropriation of benefits from innovation and the distance between different technological bases or regional sources in terms of single parameters, or instantaneous rates of growth, weighting respectively the leakage and the absorption intensities of flows and stocks of knowledge. Several theoretical predictions about the direction and magnitude of the knowledge spillovers can therefore be deducted from parametric changes in the leakage and absorption functions of our model arising from, among other things: - Improvements in information technology and falling communication costs observed in the economic system at general. - Improvements in technological communication systems within specific technological districts. - The establishment of explicit cooperative relations and effective access to the pool of collective knowledge, or instead any improvements of the mutuality and trust conditions, within the group of firms located and operating within a specific region. - The increasing of competitive pressures, or the working of any other mechanism for lowering the appropriation of a firm’s gains from innovation, in an array of industrial sectors. One interesting theoretical result is then derived from our full model. With such purpose in mind, we consider first the existence of a relevant competitive situation where appropriation and communication are both dependent upon the number of receiving and sending firms within the region. Whereas the amount of technological leakage per firm increases with the number of firms effectively operating within the region, ceteris paribus; the extent of absorption per firm also increases with the number of firms effectively communicating within the region, ceteris paribus. Apparently, there is a trade-off between such appropriation conditions and communication conditions. In the long-run, the addition of firms eventually exhausts the net positive effects of taking part in an effective network, and so we can establish an equilibrium number of firms operating in the region.

    Integrated graphical framework accounting for the nature and the speed of the learning process: an application to MNEs strategies of internationalisation of production and R&D investment

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    Existing illustrations of the learning phenomenon either stress the relationship between flows and stocks, neglecting the chronological time variable, or the speed of knowledge accumulation along time, neglecting the nature of the underlying learning process. In this paper we present a graphical depiction stressing, in an explicit way, both the nature of interplay between flows and stocks and the intensity of the learning process. The four-quadrant graphs that we develop overcome considerable simplification in literature by deriving, by construction, a measure of dynamic gains of knowledge following the interplay of stock of scientific and technological knowledge and the flow of effort in R&D. This scheme is then applied to study the internationalisation of production and R&D, which are strategies followed by multinational firms. Two types of innovation – process innovation and product innovation – are therefore studied constructing, in each case, an industry performance measure adequately indexed to the cumulated knowledge stock at a given moment in time. In any case, the dynamic efficiency measure adopted naturally takes into account both the absolute changes in the technology indexes and the time delays to reach them, which are properly discounted. Regarding multinationals strategies - internationalisation of production and R&D investment -, we begin with the question of finding a new location for using a now well developed production technology, and then deal with the problem of selecting a region of excellence in research to take gains of concentration advantages and local externalities.Learning; knowledge; technology; R&D; MNEs

    A Model of the Learning Process with Local Knowledge Externalities Illustrated with an Integrated Graphical Framework

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    We present a unified graphical framework accounting for the nature and impact of spillover effects. The dynamics of the learning process with a specific spillover transfer mechanism can be illustrated by recurring to this four-quadrant picture. In particular, a whole cycle of technological learning is explained with help of such a graphical representation of the basic learning process in the presence of knowledge spillovers. We hypothesize two different functional specifications of spillover exchanges among firms within a local innovation system. Each conceivable shape for the knowledge transfer relationship among firms expresses a possible mode and intensity of information processing arising from technology spillovers. A general proposition regarding the relative efficiency of the two alternative formal models with spillovers effects is derived. The basic models with spillover effects are then extended in several relevant directions.Learning; knowledge; technology spillovers; knowledge externalities; local innovation systems

    Does structure influence growth? A panel data econometric assessment of ‘relatively less developed’ countries, 1979-2003

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    Neo-Schumpeterian streams of research emphasize the close relationship between changes in economic structure in favour of high-skill and high-tech branches and rapid economic growth. They identify the emergence of a new technological paradigm, strongly based on the application of information and communication technologies (ICTs), in the 1970s, arguing that in such periods of transition and emergence of new techno-economic paradigms the relatively less developed countries have higher opportunities to catch-up. Although this debate is theoretically well documented, the empirics seem to lag behind the theory. In this paper, we contribute to this literature by adding illuminating evidence on the issue. More precisely, we relate the growth experiences of countries which had relatively similar economic structures in the late 1970s, with changes occurring in these countries’ structures between 1979 and 2003. The results reveal a robust relationship between structure and (labour) productivity growth, and lend support to the view that producing (though not user) ICT-related industries are strategic branches of economic activity.Structural change, Economic growth, Technical change

    Empreendedorismo polĂ­tico local em Portugal. Uma anĂĄlise exploratĂłria

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    O artigo identifica as actividades empreendedoras e os municĂ­pios empreendedores em Portugal. Cerca de metade dos municĂ­pios portugueses respondentes possuem e/ou tĂȘm em curso actividades e iniciativas empreendedoras. A vasta maioria afirma ter obtido e/ou se candidatado a fundos de financiamento. Mais de um terço possui ou tem em curso infraestruturas de apoio Ă s actividades de carĂĄcter empresarial e social e cerca de 40% possui e/ou tem em curso actividades e serviços de apoio Ă s actividades de carĂĄcter empresarial e social. Os municĂ­pios mais empreendedores sĂŁo Mirandela (Alto TrĂĄs-os-Montes), Vila Real de Santo AntĂłnio (Algarve), Cascais (Grande Lisboa), Vila da Praia da VitĂłria (RegiĂŁo AutĂłnoma dos Açores) e Batalha (Pinhal Litoral), enquanto que os menos empreendedores sĂŁo Meda (Beira Interior Norte), Porto Santo (RegiĂŁo AutĂłnoma da Madeira), Vila do Porto (RegiĂŁo AutĂłnoma dos Açores), Amarante (TĂąmega) e Barrancos (Baixo Alentejo). Os diferentes tipos de empreendedorismo estĂŁo associados nĂŁo sĂł a distintas caracterĂ­sticas individuais dos presidentes de cĂąmara mas tambĂ©m, e sobretudo, a caracterĂ­sticas contextuais das regiĂ”es onde se localizam os municĂ­pios.Empreendedorismo polĂ­tico; municĂ­pios; Portugal.

    Identificar características empreendedoras em crianças? O potencial da história dramatizada

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    Em cada pessoa existe um potencial empreendedor sendo a educação para o empreendedorismo o meio mais eficaz para o dinamizar e promover (Dolabela, 2008). Contudo, como abordar um tema tĂŁo complexo com crianças? Objetivo: Identificar a existĂȘncia ou nĂŁo de caracterĂ­sticas empreendedoras em contexto de narração de histĂłria em crianças. Participantes: Uma turma do 1Âș ano com 18 alunos e uma de 3Âș ano com 19 alunos entre os 6 e os 9 anos (7,2±1,1) de uma escola de Braga. Instrumentos/Procedimentos: ConstruĂ­ram-se categorias e subcategorias suportadas pela revisĂŁo da literatura que determinaram as caracterĂ­sticas empreendedoras a avaliar. Elaborou-se uma histĂłria construĂ­da de raiz, tendo por base o tema piratas e a procura de tesouros. Trata-se de uma histĂłria dinĂąmica, em que, cada uma das suas etapas termina com um desafio ou questĂŁo para os alunos. Assim, estes podem assumir-se como personagens, dar sugestĂ”es argumentadas sobre o caminho a seguir na histĂłria e ainda fazer opçÔes entre vĂĄrias possĂ­veis. A histĂłria foi aplicada, em cada um dos anos de escolaridade, em grupos focais, de seis crianças. DiscussĂŁo dos resultados: A observação das diferentes subcategorias permitiram-nos verificar comportamentos positivos (CP), inversos (CI) e nĂŁo observados (CNO). Constatamos que em cinco das oito categorias a maioria dos alunos as revelou de forma positiva com destaque para a “Autoconfiança” e “RelaçÔes interpessoais” e ainda que aquelas em que se verificou maior percentagem de alunos que manifestaram CI foram a “Autoconfiança”, “RelaçÔes interpessoais” destacando-se a “PersistĂȘncia/ResistĂȘncia ao Fracasso. As categorias em que mais se verificaram CNO foram a “Liderança / Tomada de decisĂŁo” e “Organização e Planeamento”. SĂŁo necessĂĄrias mais investigaçÔes de forma a reunir um nĂșmero considerĂĄvel de contribuiçÔes para a validação de um instrumento que se adapte Ă  linguagem da criança e que, de uma forma lĂșdica e motivadora, permita identificar caracterĂ­sticas empreendedoras.CIEC (Centro de Investigação em Estudos da Criança), pelo Projeto EstratĂ©gico UID/CED/00317/2013, atravĂ©s dos Fundos Nacionais da FCT (Fundação para a CiĂȘncia e a Tecnologia), cofinanciado pelo Fundo Europeu de Desenvolvimento Regional (FEDER) atravĂ©s do COMPETE 2020 – Programa Operacional Competitividade e Internacionalização (POCI) com a referĂȘncia POCI-01-0145-FEDER-007562info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Use of solvent extraction to remediate soils contaminated with hydrocarbons

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    The main objective of this research is to exploit the possibility of using an ex situ solvent extraction technique for the remediation of soils contaminated with semi-volatile petroleum hydrocarbons. The composition of the organic phase was chosen in order to form a single phase mixture with an aqueous phase and simultaneously not being disturbed (forming stable emulsions) by the soil particles hauling the contaminants. It should also permit a regeneration of the organic solvent phase. As first, we studied the miscibility domain of the chosen ternary systems constituted by ethyl acetate–acetone–water. This system proved to satisfy the previous requirements allowing for the formation of a single liquid phase mixture within a large spectrum of compositions, and also allowing for an intimate contact with the soil. Contaminants in the diesel range within different functional groups were selected: xylene, naphthalene and hexadecane. The analytical control was done by gas chromatography with FID detector. The kinetics of the extractions proved to be fast, leading to equilibrium after 10 min. The effect of the solid–liquid ratio on the extraction efficiency was studied. Lower S/L ratios (1:8, w/v) proved to be more efficient, reaching recoveries in the order of 95%. The option of extraction in multiple contacts did not improve the recovery in relation to a single contact. The solvent can be regenerated by distillation with a loss around 10%. The contaminants are not evaporated and they remain in the non-volatile phase. The global results show that the ex situ solvent extraction is technically a feasible option for the remediation of semi-volatile aromatic, polyaromatic and linear hydrocarbons
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