21 research outputs found
The effect of the state sector on wage inequality in urban China: 1988–2007
This paper examines the effect of the public sector and state-owned enterprises (SOEs) on wage inequality in urban China using China Household Income Project data. It applies quantile regression analysis, the Machado and Mata decomposition to investigate how urban wage inequality was affected by the changes in wage structure and employment shares of the public sector and SOEs. We find that since the radical state sector reforms designed to reduce overstaffing and improve efficiency in the late 1990s, urban wage gaps were narrowed due to the reduction in the employment share of the state sector; the wage premium of the state sector in comparison with the non-state sector increased significantly; and changes in the wage structure of the labour market caused the rise in urban wage inequality
Emergency-Dependent Supply Decisions with Risk Perception and Price Control
This paper studies the impact of emergencies on the supplier’s decision-making behaviors including production and information sharing in consideration of consumer risk perception, consumer loss aversion phenomenon, and government price control. The intensity of emergencies is sequential and emergencies can be divided into two types (positive or negative) according to their effect on demand. When emergencies have negative effect on demand, the supplier’s sales will reduce and he would share information to the market. When emergencies have positive effect on demand, we find that when the price is under price cap the supplier will not share information to the market; when the price reaches price cap, the supplier will share a certain amount of information to the market. We were surprised to find that increasing demand is not always good for the supplier when there exist government price control and lost sales penalty, and information helps the supplier to effectively manipulate demand
Fabrication of an Optoplasmonic Raft with Improved SERS Performance Detecting Methamphetamine through Bubble Enrichment
In
this work, a novel raft-like structure that combines noble metal
nanoparticles (NPs) with an interconnected layer of hemispherical
dielectric shell was fabricated and characterized. It was discovered
that this hybrid material can enhance the optoplasmonic interaction
between plasmonic and dielectric components, thereby improving the
sensing performance in surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS).
Varied geometric parameters of the fabricated optoplasmonic raft,
including the inner diameter and thickness of the dielectric shell,
were attempted and analyzed through numerical simulation and experimental
SERS measurements. With particular size, thickness, and incident orientation,
the silica shell focuses the incident optical flow into the deposited
silver NPs, undergoing similar near-field focusing behavior in comparison
with other optoplasmonic entities. This optoplasmonic raft floating
on the water surface is able to harvest the target molecules effectively
through bubble enrichment, which rapidly captures and concentrates
analytes from the aqueous phase. With a limited sampling time, the
sensing performance of the developed optoplasmonic raft is improved
by applying the optimized parameters involved in bubble enrichment.
The substrates and corresponding enrichment method were implemented
in the detection of methamphetamine (METH), achieving a limit of detection
(LOD) down to 0.035 nM. As for practical onsite detection, the developed
substrate and bubbling strategy were applied in an assembled set,
employing a portable Raman spectrometer and an air pump. This set
is able to detect METH dissolved in regular commercial beer, which
is quite competent in the investigation of drug abuse
Displacement and economic consequences of the Three Gorges Project: A case study of resettlers in Sichuan Province
Due to the construction of the Three Gorges Dam, more than 10,000 rural migrants from Kaixian County were displaced and resettled in Sichuan Province under the “government-organized distant resettlement” program between 2000 and 2004. This study examines the circumstances of the migrants' livelihood reconstruction in the early stages after displacement. Six towns that received migrants were selected as sites for the case studies. Structured question interviews with migrants and host residents were conducted from April to June in 2007 and in January 2008. Survey data on the livelihoods of resettled migrant households show a propensity for impoverishment. The study concludes with some insights into the development impact of environmental displacement. Yan Tan, Yong Chen and Graeme Hugohttp://trove.nla.gov.au/work/3464593