117 research outputs found
Panic on the streets of London
The terrorist attacks of 7 July 2005 resulted in a very large redeployment of police officers to central London boroughs. New research by Mirko Draca, Stephen Machin and Robert Witt looks at the impact of this increased security presence on criminal activity in the weeks and months after the bomb blasts
How Useful Is The Genuine Savings Rate As A Macroeconomic Sustainability Indicator For Countries And Regions? Australia And Queensland Compared
This paper demonstrates how macroeconomic indicators of sustainable development can be applied to the Queensland economy. We derive a Genuine Savings Rate (GSR) for Queensland for the period 1989 to 1999, which is then compared with the World Bank estimate of Australia's GSR for the same period. Specifically, we examine how well a single "headline" indicator based on the World Bank's GSR performs as a measure of overall sustainability. In doing so, we review criticisms of the GSR and compare its potential policy directives with those emerging from the use of net state savings and then the GSR as part of a suite of indicators.
Exploration and exploitation in US technological change
How do firms and inventors move through âknowledge spaceâ as they develop their innovations? We propose a method for tracking patterns of âexploration and exploitationâ in patenting behaviour in the US for the period since 1920. Our exploration measure is constructed from the text of patents and involves the use of âBayesian Surpriseâ to measure how different current patent-based innovations are from existing portfolios. Our results indicate that there are distinct âlife-cycleâ patterns to firm and inventor exploration. Furthermore, exploration activity is more geographically concentrated than general patenting, but this concentration is centred outside the main hubs of patenting
Advancing the Economics of Gender: New Insights and a Roadmap for the Future
This article introduces the Special Issue on Gender Differences by reviewing some of the most recent facts on the topic and placing the contributions of each of the papers in the Special Issue in the context of a burgeoning, vibrant literature
Minimum Wage Channels of Adjustment
Industrial Relations, forthcoming Abstract: The effects of minimum wage increases in 2007-2009 are analyzed using a sample of restaurants from Georgia/Alabama. Store-level payroll records provide precise measures of compliance costs. Examined are multiple adjustment channels. Exploiting variation in compliance costs across restaurants, we find employment and hours responses to be variable and in most cases statistically insignificant. Channels of adjustment to wage increases and to changes in non-labor costs include prices, profits, wage compression, turnover, and performance standards
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