4,611 research outputs found

    Chapter 1 Economic Integration and Industry Location: Theories, Empirical Results, and Implications for CLMV

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    Trade affects the internal location of industry in two ways: it induces firms to specialize and it expands the set of markets that firms serve. If there are industry-specific external economies, firms in related industries will spatially agglomerate (Hanson 1996a). In the context of economic integration, diminished barriers to trade affect industry location particularly in less developed countries. As described below, regional agreements in North America and Europe have caused frontier regions to expand. These regions, which include border regions and port cities, have advantages over internal regions in terms of access to foreign markets. Since trade liberalization induces many firms in developing countries to participate in production networks and to specialize in labor-intensive activities such as assembling and processing of foreign-made components, their inputs as well as final products need to be carried across borders. Therefore, the best industry location, one that minimizes transport costs, is likely to shift to frontier regions. In East Asia, China has developed rapidly since it opened up to international trade. Simultaneously, a large amount of foreign direct investment (FDI) has been attracted and industry agglomerations have been formed in coastal regions, that is, frontier regions linked to the global market by sea, leaving many internal regions behind. Similarly, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, and Vietnam (CLMV) have joined AFTA and/or the WTO and liberalized international trade since the 1990s. Moreover, transport infrastructures such as the East-West Economic Corridor, the Southern Economic Corridor, and the North-South Economic Corridor have been built and narrowed economic distances in the Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS). As a result, frontier regions are likely to increase their location advantages and lure labor-intensive operations from neighboring countries. It is expected that, as has happened in North America and Europe, economic integration in East Asia will significantly affect internal geography in CLMV. In this study, I first review theories relevant to economic integration and industry location within a country. In particular, emphasis is placed on the new economic geography (NEG). Secondly, empirical results for North America and Europe are surveyed since they have preceded East Asia in regional integration and a substantial number of studies have been conducted on these regions. The final section summarizes and discusses implications for internal geography in CLMV.Southeast Asia, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Vietnam, International economic integration, Economic geography

    Unexpectedly fast transfer of positron-emittable artificial substrate into N-terminus of peptide/protein mediated by wild-type L/F-tRNA-protein transferase

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    This article demonstrates the fastest enzymatic introduction of a positron emission tomography (PET) probe into acceptor peptides/proteins. It is site-specifically introduced at the basic N-terminus of the acceptors by using L/F-transferase in combination with aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase, namely the NEXT-A/PET reaction. Estimated from kinetic analysis, the transfer efficiency of O-(2-fluoromethyl)-L-tyrosine as an artificial amino acid PET probe mediated by the wild-type transferase is almost as good as that of the natural substrate, phenylalanine

    Shock Transmission Mechanism of the Economic Crisis in East Asia : An Application of International Input-Output Analysis

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    This paper investigates the impacts of the 2008 economic crisis on industries in East Asia. By using the updated Asian international input-output table for 2008, the paper attempts to identify the transmission mechanism and the magnitude of impact of the crisis on industries in East Asia. The analyses reveal that the crisis significantly affected industrial output of the nine East Asian countries. In particular, the countries which are deeply involved in production networks were affected most seriously. Moreover, the analyses show that the impact was transmitted to East Asian industries considerably through the Ć¢ā‚¬Å“triangular tradeĆ¢ā‚¬, in which China imports parts and components from neighboring East Asian countries and then exports final products to the U.S. and EU markets.International Trade, Input-output Tables, East Asia, Asian International Input-output Table, Triangular Trade, Production Network

    Proportional Symbol Mapping in R

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    Visualization of spatial data on a map aids not only in data exploration but also in communication to impart spatial conception or ideas to others. Although recent carto-graphic functions in R are rapidly becoming richer, proportional symbol mapping, which is one of the common mapping approaches, has not been packaged thus far. Based on the theories of proportional symbol mapping developed in cartography, the authors developed some functions for proportional symbol mapping using R, including mathematical and perceptual scaling. An example of these functions demonstrated the new expressive power and options available in R, particularly for the visualization of conceptual point data.

    Innovation networks in China, Japan, and Korea : evidence from Japanese patent data

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    The growing importance of innovation in economic growth has encouraged the development of innovation capabilities in East Asia, within which China, Japan, and Korea are most important in terms of technological capabilities. Using Japanese patent data, we examine how knowledge networks have developed among these countries. We find that Japan's technological specialization saw little change, but those of Korea and China changed rapidly since 1970s. By the year 2009, technology specialization has become similar across three countries in the sense that the common field of prominent technology is "electronic circuits and communication technologies". Patent citations suggest that technology flows were largest in the electronic technology, pointing to the deepening of innovation networks in these countries.East Asia, China, South Korea, Japan, Technological innovations, Industrial technology, Patents, Technology transfer, Electronics, Telecommunication, Innovation network, Patent statistics

    Lagrange Duality of Set-Valued Optimization with Natural Criteria

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    Set optimization problems with objective set-valued maps are considered, and some criteria of solutions are defined. Also, cone lower semicontinuities of set-valued maps are introduced, and existence theorems of solutions of such problems are es-tablished. Moreover, some duality results of these problems are investigated

    Dr Igor Klatzo (1916ā€“2007)

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/90538/1/j.1440-1789.2007.00850.x.pd
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