18 research outputs found

    Exploring the microfoundations of hybridity: A judgment-based approach

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    We explore the concept of organizational hybridity from the perspective of the Judgment-Based Approach to entrepreneurship (JBA). The JBA provides much-needed microfoundations for hybridity in the form of a more nuanced, action-based view of the market mechanism in shaping enterprises. Rather than a problem of conflicting logics at the organizational level, hybridity is redefined as entrepreneurial judgment at the individual level about combinations of monetary and psychic profit. Viewed this way, hybridity is a universal characteristic of real-world enterprises rather than a defining feature of a specific subset of them. This approach thus ultimately reshapes our understanding of hybridity and suggests an alternative view that is less conflictual and insular, and more conciliatory and integrated. It also sheds light on various problems facing such enterprises, including strategy formation, practical wisdom, normative pressures, mission drift, entrepreneurial groups, and public policy

    “When Henry Met Fritz”: Rules As Organizational Frameworks: For Emergent Strategy Process

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    Henry Mintzberg’s celebrated critique of the “design school” argued that strategy is the best thought of as adaptive, bottom-up, and based on dispersed knowledge and learning. Yet Mintzberg’s account lacks a clear and comprehensive theoretical underpinning, especially regarding how to guide emergent strategy in dynamic environments, and leverage it to exploit value creation. We provide this foundation by showing how Mintzberg’s critique of planning and design at the level of organizational strategy is in key ways anticipated by F.A. Hayek’s critique of planning and design at the societal level. Both writers are critical of rationalist epistemology and instead stress experiential knowledge, fallibility, and unanticipated social consequences. Hayek also extends Mintzberg’s work by showing how rules in the firm capture adaptive, experiential, tacit, and dispersed knowledge in the context of dynamic environments. A framework of rules thus creates inimitable and non-substitutable resources that enable the firm to fully exploit its competitive advantage

    Monopoly as a ‘culture-history fact’: Knight, Menger, and the role of institutions

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    Frank Knight's theory of monopoly price has received relatively little attention in the literature on Risk, Uncertainty and Profit. We argue that Knight accepted and refined the monopoly price theory of Carl Menger and his followers. Knight highlights the difference between monopoly as an inevitable outcome of departures from perfect competition, and monopoly as a contingent or ‘culture-history fact’. In the latter case, coercive institutional barriers to potential competition shape the choice set of consumers and producers, and provide a crucial method for identifying monopoly gains. There are three benefits to this account of Knight's contributions: it rehabilitates the focus on the institutional determinants of monopoly price, as opposed to the mainstream emphasis on market frictions and imperfections; it opens the way for a Mengerian monopoly price theory that seriously engages the study of institutions; and it adds new evidence and nuance to ongoing debates about Knight's place in economics

    Currency depreciation and the monetary adjustment process: Reconsidering Lord King's contributions

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    © Oxford University Press 2018, All rights reserved. This paper investigates Lord King's contributions in light of the renewed debate on international monetary policy coordination. We argue that King's work contains refined bullionist insights concerning currency depreciation, exchange rate determination, and balance of payments adjustment. We show how King's analysis of the monetary process under different currency regimes can help elucidate the effects of unconventional monetary policy on a global scale, concerning monetary spillovers, currency wars, business cycles, and the distribution of wealth

    L'effet Cantillon dans la théorie du commerce international : L’impact de la monnaie fiduciaire sur le commerce, la finance et la distribution internationale des patrimoines

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    This dissertation endeavors to offer a way to bridge the gap between the analysis of real and monetary phenomena in international economics. To this end, I analyze Cantillon effects, i.e. the differential impact of monetary expansion on prices, production, wealth, and the pattern of international trade. In Part I review the standard literature in international economics from the 19th century to contemporary theories. In Part II I use the contributions of Ludwig von Mises to the theory of money and business cycles as the foundation for the analysis of monetary expansion and international trade. In Chapter 4, I focus on the relationship between financial development and international trade. In Chapter 5, I analyze the impact of inflation and5fractional reserve banking on trade finance, and the transmission of business cycles across national borders. The main findings of my research are that monetary expansion modifies the direction, composition, volume and value of trade and capital flows. I apply this framework in Chapter 6, to explain the evolution of merchandise and capital flows over the last decades, and illustrate my findings with statistical evidence from the most recent financial crisis and the global trade collapse of 2008-2009. In Part III I analyze the impact of monetary expansion on international industrial organization, and the global distribution of income and wealth. In the concluding section, I draw out the major implications of my analysis for international trade and monetary policies, and its importance for future research.Cette thèse vise à combler le fossé entre l'analyse de l’économie réelle et l’économie monétaire dans la théorie du commerce international. À cette fin, j’analyse l’effet Cantillon, i.e. l'impact différentiel de l'expansion monétaire sur les prix, la production, les patrimoines et la structure du commerce international. Dans la première partie, je passe en revue la littérature en économie internationale, à partir du 19e siècle jusqu’aux théories contemporaines. Dans la deuxième partie, j’utilise les contributions de Ludwig von Mises à la théorie de la monnaie et des cycles économiques comme fondement de l'analyse de l’impact de l'expansion monétaire sur le commerce international. Dans le chapitre 4, j’examine la relation entre le développement du marché financier et le commerce. Dans le chapitre 5, je discute l'impact de l'inflation monétaire sur les modes de financement du commerce et sur la transmission des cycles économiques. Les principaux résultats de ma recherche sont que l'expansion monétaire modifie la direction, la composition, le volume et la valeur des flux commerciaux et de capitaux. J’applique ce cadre théorétique dans le chapitre 6, pour expliquer l'évolution des ventes de marchandises et des flux de capitaux au cours des dernières décennies, et d'illustrer mes conclusions avec les données statistiques de la plus récente crise financière et de l'effondrement du commerce mondial de 2008-2009. Dans la troisième partie, j’analyse l’impact de l'expansion monétaire sur l’organisation industrielle internationale et la distribution mondiale des revenus et des patrimoines. Dans la section finale, je présente les implications majeures de mon analyse pour le commerce international et les politiques monétaires, et son importance pour des recherches futures

    Cantillon effects in international trade : the consequences of fiat money for trade, finance, and the international distribution of wealth

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    Cette thèse vise à combler le fossé entre l'analyse de l’économie réelle et l’économie monétaire dans la théorie du commerce international. À cette fin, j’analyse l’effet Cantillon, i.e. l'impact différentiel de l'expansion monétaire sur les prix, la production, les patrimoines et la structure du commerce international. Dans la première partie, je passe en revue la littérature en économie internationale, à partir du 19e siècle jusqu’aux théories contemporaines. Dans la deuxième partie, j’utilise les contributions de Ludwig von Mises à la théorie de la monnaie et des cycles économiques comme fondement de l'analyse de l’impact de l'expansion monétaire sur le commerce international. Dans le chapitre 4, j’examine la relation entre le développement du marché financier et le commerce. Dans le chapitre 5, je discute l'impact de l'inflation monétaire sur les modes de financement du commerce et sur la transmission des cycles économiques. Les principaux résultats de ma recherche sont que l'expansion monétaire modifie la direction, la composition, le volume et la valeur des flux commerciaux et de capitaux. J’applique ce cadre théorétique dans le chapitre 6, pour expliquer l'évolution des ventes de marchandises et des flux de capitaux au cours des dernières décennies, et d'illustrer mes conclusions avec les données statistiques de la plus récente crise financière et de l'effondrement du commerce mondial de 2008-2009. Dans la troisième partie, j’analyse l’impact de l'expansion monétaire sur l’organisation industrielle internationale et la distribution mondiale des revenus et des patrimoines. Dans la section finale, je présente les implications majeures de mon analyse pour le commerce international et les politiques monétaires, et son importance pour des recherches futures.This dissertation endeavors to offer a way to bridge the gap between the analysis of real and monetary phenomena in international economics. To this end, I analyze Cantillon effects, i.e. the differential impact of monetary expansion on prices, production, wealth, and the pattern of international trade. In Part I review the standard literature in international economics from the 19th century to contemporary theories. In Part II I use the contributions of Ludwig von Mises to the theory of money and business cycles as the foundation for the analysis of monetary expansion and international trade. In Chapter 4, I focus on the relationship between financial development and international trade. In Chapter 5, I analyze the impact of inflation and5fractional reserve banking on trade finance, and the transmission of business cycles across national borders. The main findings of my research are that monetary expansion modifies the direction, composition, volume and value of trade and capital flows. I apply this framework in Chapter 6, to explain the evolution of merchandise and capital flows over the last decades, and illustrate my findings with statistical evidence from the most recent financial crisis and the global trade collapse of 2008-2009. In Part III I analyze the impact of monetary expansion on international industrial organization, and the global distribution of income and wealth. In the concluding section, I draw out the major implications of my analysis for international trade and monetary policies, and its importance for future research

    Palliative Care in AIDS Cases

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    Terminal stages of AIDS must enjoy special attention and care for both patients and their relatives. Material and method: There were studied retrospectively case report forms of patients who died of AIDS in the Infectious Diseases Clinic of Iasi. In the department of HIV-infected patients of the Infectious Diseases Hospital of Iasi, within the last 3 years (2007-2009) there were 28 deaths, with an average of 9 patients per year. Most of them died of multiple organ failure, in the final stage of AIDS (10 cases), meningeal coma (5 cases) or respiratory failure during the terminal pulmonary pneomocystosis TB (13 cases). The palliative therapy was conducted throughout the hospitalisation of the terminal stage. The patients who survived longer required psychological support from admission until they lost their state of consciousness – they were 23 in number, with a duration of psychological palliation from 2 to 32 days. Objectives: Establishing a team and protocols of palliative care for these patients. Conclusions: Palliative care, in cases of terminal AIDS disease, must be conducted by a team including specialists in infectious diseases, in intensive care, psychologists and it also addresses the patients’ families

    EMERGING AND RE-EMERGING DISEASES – THE THREAT CONTINUES

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    Infectious diseases have accompanied human development from the earliest times and have often influenced it greatly. Although they were considered “an endangered species” in the second half of the 20th century, they continue to pose a serious threat to individual or public health. Diagnosis technique improvement, climate changes, increased population mobility and vaccine cover decrease are only some of the factors that have contributed lately to the occurrence and fast spreading of new pathogens or to the re-emerging of diseases already considered historical. Most of these infectious agents (Zika, Ebola, Chikungunya, MERS, SARS, new influenza viruses), for which there are few therapeutic resources, were the cause for regional or global epidemic outbreaks, which generated concern among healthcare professionals and often panic in the population, as well as significant economic losses. The international and medical communities joined their forces and got financially and logistically involved, sometimes paying with their own lives, in fighting these new threats. The fast understanding of the epidemiological process, pathogenesis and development of diagnosis and prevention methods has often helped limit the spread of emerging diseases and has laid the grounds for their future control

    Outcomes of Chronic Hepatitis C Treatment in The Infectious Diseases Hospital Iasi

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    Chronic hepatitis C is an important cause of morbidity and mortality due o hepatic disease. Material and method The retrospectively studied the evolution of 30 patients with chronic hepatitis C, treated in the Infectious Diseases Hospital of Iasi, with Peginterferon and Ribavirin for 48 weeks. Results 18 patients were treated with Peginterferon α2a and Ribavirin, and 12 with Peginterferon α2b and Ribavirin. Most of them (73.3%) were adults, aged between 30 and 50 years, with a sex ratio M/F – 13/17. Most of them had risk factors for the transmission of HCV: 28 of them suffered surgery and 2 of them had infected sexual partners. 3 patients didn’t achieve a rapid virusologic response and 6 patients were relapsers. All the other 70% of patients had a sustained virologic response. The side effects were present in all patients, with a moderate intensity. Conclusion The success (SVR) rate of antiviral therapy was higher than expected (especially for genotype 1 HCV). The patients with a viral relapse could be soon treated with the new protease inhibitors and hope for a cure
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