11,065 research outputs found
The Persistence of Corruption and Slow Economic Growth
There is increasing recognition that corruption has substantial, adverse effects on economic growth. But if the costs of corruption are so high, why don't countries strive to improve their institutions and root out corruption? Why do many countries appear to be stuck in vicious circles of widespread corruption and low economic growth, often accompanied by ever-changing governments through revolutions and coups? A possible explanation is that when corruption is widespread, individuals do not have incentives to fight it even if everybody would be better off without it. Two models involving strategic complementarities and multiple equilibria attempt to illustrate this formally. Copyright 2004, International Monetary Fund
Charge polarization, local electroneutrality breakdown and eddy formation due to electroosmosis in varying-section channels
We characterize the dynamics of an electrolyte embedded in a varying-section
channel under the action of a constant external electrostatic field. By means
of molecular dynamics simulations we determine the stationary density, charge
and velocity profiles of the electrolyte. Our results show that when the Debye
length is comparable to the width of the channel bottlenecks a concentration
polarization along with two eddies sets inside the channel. Interestingly, upon
increasing the external field, local electroneutrality breaks down and charge
polarization sets leading to the onset of net dipolar field. This novel
scenario, that cannot be captured by the standard approaches based on local
electroneutrality, opens the route for the realization of novel micro and
nano-fluidic devices
Response of Complex Systems to Complex Perturbations: the Complexity Matching Effect
The dynamical emergence (and subsequent intermittent breakdown) of collective
behavior in complex systems is described as a non-Poisson renewal process,
characterized by a waiting-time distribution density for the time
intervals between successively recorded breakdowns. In the intermittent case
, with complexity index . We show that two systems
can exchange information through complexity matching and present theoretical
and numerical calculations describing a system with complexity index
perturbed by a signal with complexity index . The analysis focuses on
the non-ergodic (non-stationary) case showing that for
, the system statistically inherits the correlation
function of the perturbation . The condition is a resonant
maximum for correlation information exchange.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
How Do the Skilled and the Unskilled Respond to Regional Shocks?: The Case of Spain
Are there any differences in how workers of different skill levels respond to regional shocks? This paper addresses that question using the methodology of Blanchard and Katz (1992) and a unique data set on working-age population, labor force, and employment for five educational groups (ranging from the illiterate to the college-educated) over 1964-92 for the 50 Spanish provinces. The paper finds that the highly skilled migrate very promptly in response to a decline in regional labor demand, while low-skilled workers drop out of the labor force or stay unemployed. Copyright 1999, International Monetary Fund
Isotropic quantum walks on lattices and the Weyl equation
We present a thorough classification of the isotropic quantum walks on
lattices of dimension for cell dimension . For there exist
two isotropic walks, namely the Weyl quantum walks presented in Ref. [G. M.
D'Ariano and P. Perinotti, Phys. Rev. A 90, 062106 (2014)], resulting in the
derivation of the Weyl equation from informational principles. The present
analysis, via a crucial use of isotropy, is significantly shorter and avoids a
superfluous technical assumption, making the result completely general.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figur
Chirality from quantum walks without quantum coin
Quantum walks (QWs) describe the evolution of quantum systems on graphs. An
intrinsic degree of freedom---called the coin and represented by a
finite-dimensional Hilbert space---is associated to each node. Scalar quantum
walks are QWs with a one-dimensional coin. We propose a general strategy
allowing one to construct scalar QWs on a broad variety of graphs, which admit
embedding in Eulidean spaces, thus having a direct geometric interpretation.
After reviewing the technique that allows one to regroup cells of nodes into
new nodes, transforming finite spatial blocks into internal degrees of freedom,
we prove that no QW with a two-dimensional coin can be derived from an
isotropic scalar QW in this way. Finally we show that the Weyl and Dirac QWs
can be derived from scalar QWs in spaces of dimension up to three, via our
construction.Comment: 22 pages, 2 figure
- …