4,227 research outputs found
Preferences for Government Size and their Effect on Labor-Leisure Decisions
While many economists have theorized and/or empirically demonstrated that labor-leisure decisions are influenced by the rate of taxation, this note introduces a new mechanism in which the collecting of taxes on income may affect such decisions. Although standard models assume that agents have no preference for the size and scope of government activity, recent and past political rhetoric suggests that preferences do exist. We examine how labor-leisure decisions can be affected when taxes are derived from income and agents' utility functions include a preference for government size.
ARE AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION FACULTY SALARIES COMPETITIVELY OR MONOPSONISTICALLY DETERMINED?
We examine the determinants of agricultural experiment station faculty salaries and find that productivity pays-as manifest by grantsmanship, publications, and the elicitation of competing offers-with no residual evidence of a negative seniority-salary relationship that could signal university monopsony power. This contrasts with findings in the previous literature on faculty salaries. Moreover, national market salary benchmarks, which may proxy for imperfectly observable productivity, correlate almost one-for-one with individual faculty salaries, with individual deviations from peers' salaries proving essentially random. This evidence is much more consistent with the hypothesis that experiment station faculty salaries are determined in a competitive labor market than with the prevailing wisdom that they are set monopsonistically.Teaching/Communication/Extension/Profession,
ARE AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION FACULTY SALARIES COMPETITIVELY OR MONOPSONISTICALLY DETERMINED?
Labor and Human Capital, Teaching/Communication/Extension/Profession,
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Realizing Musical Gestures with the Computer: Paradigms and Problems
This article aims to approach the creation of a gestural language in music. The writer discusses aspects of composition, notation, and performance of musical gestures for acoustic instruments
The Violence in Baton Rouge
Baton Rouge, Louisiana is rich in culture yet suffers from high levels of crime and poverty. This paper explores whether the crime and economics are linked within the city. The research reviews the poverty and crime of the city through statistical data and interviews. The statistical data was taken from the 17 populated zip codes in the city. The analysis of the data took each zip code and compared their economic rates with their crime rates. The patterns found in the statistical data were then compared to the testimonies given from interviews. Each person interviewed was chosen due to their strong involvement in either alleviating the poverty or crime in the city. The analysis generated new insights into the root problems causing the high levels of crime and violence. The patterns and conclusions revealed that the majority of the economics and crime are linked. However, the research also revealed a city full of structures and systems that could also be responsible for the high levels of crime and poverty. Transformation of the structures is suggested for the alleviation of the crimes and violence in the area
Visualising Lived Experience: Mapping the soundscape of an after-school Minecraft Club
This article demonstrates the power of employing alternative,
interpretative analysis techniques in ethnographic work. I argue for the
role of sensory interpretation as a valid and necessary method of
analytical enquiry, particularly to challenge existing dominant, primarily
written discourses that often strive for unrealistic empirical objectivity. In
order to make this argument, I demonstrate a combined sonic / visual,
interpretative approach to analysis, developed to explore the lived
experience of a group of children in an after-school club that took place
in and around the world-building videogame Minecraft. Here, inspired by
principles of Arts-based Research (ABR) which position art as a means of
‘investigation and knowing’ (Pentassuglia, 2017: 3), I employ
interpretative drawing as an analytical move. Underpinned by the work
of Deleuze and Guattari (1987: 12) I produce a ‘map’ of soundscape
data, as a means of exploring potentially side-lined aspects of lived
experience through a process of resemiotisation or transduction
(Bezemer and Kress, 2008). Developing this sonic / visual approach in
context, a process which had an impact on both the analyst and the
analysis, helped to shed new light on the site under investigation. As
such, this article builds on other analyses of sound in children’s social
and educational experience by proposing that interpretative, visual
responses to soundscape data can add value to otherwise purely written,
or purely sonic, accounts
SUBDISCIPLINE-SPECIFIC JOURNAL RANKINGS IN ECONOMICS
Teaching/Communication/Extension/Profession,
FACTOR AND PRODUCT MARKET TRADABILITY AND EQUILIBRIUM IN PACIFIC RIM PORK INDUSTRIES
This study uses a new market analysis methodology to examine price and trade relationships in eight Pacific Rim factor and product markets central to the Canadian and U.S. pork industries. The new method enables direct estimation of the frequencies with which a variety of market conditions occur, including competitive equilibrium, tradability, and segmented equilibrium. While extraordinary profit opportunities emerge episodically in a few niche markets, the vast majority of the markets studies are highly competitive- exhibiting zero estimated marginal profits to spatial arbitrage at monthly frequency- and internationally contestable. With a few notable exceptions due primarily to nontariff barriers, and despite significant remaining tariffs in some niches, the Pacific Rim is effectively a single market for pork producers and processors today.Demand and Price Analysis,
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