5,554 research outputs found

    Agglomeration, Migration and Tax Competition

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    This paper focuses on tax competition and international migration in R&D sectors as agglomeration forces and trade restrictions are present. Economic integration forces industrialized countries to adapt their tax rates in order to keep their industrial status quo. Unlike the often discussed "race to the bottom" result, taxes are increased and the provision of public goods is maintained. It is also proven that taxes that redistribute between mobile and immobile labor lead to a tax burden that favors mobile labor. As integration continues, the cutback of factor mobility restrictions supports economic development in industrialized countries at the expense of structurally backward regions. --Economic Geography,Agglomeration,Migration,Tax Competition

    International Patent Pattern and Technology Diffusion

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    The paper focuses on the impact of business related R&D spending on input factor productivity (IFP) using international patent applications as a technology diffusion channel. Considering the relationship amongst research and productivity, international patent pattern reflect the link between the source (R&D) and the use (IFP). To estimate patent related spill-over effects, I use the estimation techniques developed and proposed by Kao and Chiang (1998) in order to deal with nonstationary and cointegration and to obtain reliable coefficients. I find that patent related foreign R&D spillover effects are present and that impact on labor productivity for Non-G7 countries is higher due to foreign than domestic R&D activities.Productivity, R&D, Technology Diffusion, Nonstationary Panels

    Agglomeration, Migration and Tax Competition

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    The paper focuses on tax competition and international migration in R&D sectors as agglomeration forces and trade restrictions are present. Core countries in economically integrating regions adapt tax rates to keep their industrial status quo. Unlike the often discussed “race to the bottom” result, tax rates are increased and the provision of public goods is maintained. Additionally, tax rates that redistribute between mobile and immobile labor lead to a tax burden that favors mobile labor. As economic integration continues, the cutback of factor mobility restrictions for skilled labor supports economic development in core countries at the expense of periphery countries.Economic Geography, Agglomeration, Migration, Tax Competition

    Thermodynamically Stable One-Component Metallic Quasicrystals

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    Classical density-functional theory is employed to study finite-temperature trends in the relative stabilities of one-component quasicrystals interacting via effective metallic pair potentials derived from pseudopotential theory. Comparing the free energies of several periodic crystals and rational approximant models of quasicrystals over a range of pseudopotential parameters, thermodynamically stable quasicrystals are predicted for parameters approaching the limits of mechanical stability of the crystalline structures. The results support and significantly extend conclusions of previous ground-state lattice-sum studies.Comment: REVTeX, 13 pages + 2 figures, to appear, Europhys. Let

    Evolution of Feedback Loops in Oscillatory Systems

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    Feedback loops are major components of biochemical systems. Many systems show multiple such (positive or negative) feedback loops. Nevertheless, very few quantitative analyses address the question how such multiple feedback loops evolved. Based on published models from the mitotic cycle in embryogenesis, we build a few case studies. Using a simple core architecture (transcription, phosphorylation and degradation), we define oscillatory models having either one positive feedback or one negative feedback, or both loops. With these models, we address the following questions about evolvability: could a system evolve from a simple model to a more complex one with a continuous transition in the parameter space? How do new feedback loops emerge without disrupting the proper function of the system? Our results show that progressive formation of a second feedback loop is possible without disturbing existing oscillatory behavior. For this process, the parameters of the system have to change during evolution to maintain predefined properties of oscillations like period and amplitude.Comment: Proceedings of the 2009 FOSBE conference in Denver, CO, USA. 4 page

    CO adsorption on metal surfaces: a hybrid functional study with plane wave basis set

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    We present a detailed study of the adsorption of CO on Cu, Rh, and Pt (111) surfaces in top and hollow sites. The study has been performed using the local density approximation, the gradient corrected functional PBE, and the hybrid Hartree-Fock density functionals PBE0 and HSE03 within the framework of generalized Kohn-Sham density functional theory using a plane-wave basis set. As expected, the LDA and GGA functionals show a tendency to favor the hollow sites, at variance with experimental findings that give the top site as the most stable adsorption site. The PBE0 and HSE03 functionals reduce this tendency. In fact, they predict the correct adsorption site for Cu and Rh but fail for Pt. But even in this case, the hybrid functional destabilizes the hollow site by 50 meV compared to the PBE functional. The results of the total energy calculations are presented along with an analysis of the projected density of states.Comment: 32 pages, 6 tables, 3 figures. (Re)Submitted to Phys. Rev. B; LDA results added in the tables; minor changes in the tex

    Wissens- und Technologietransfer – Formen und Vermittler in Bayern

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    Welche Rolle spielt der Wissens- und Technologietransfer in Bayern? Kurt A. Hafner, Hochschule Heilbronn, stellt in seinem Beitrag erste deskriptive Befunde vor, die belegen, dass sich Investitionen in Forschung und Entwicklung und die damit einhergehenden Produkt- und Prozessinnovationen positiv auf die Produktivität und somit auf das regionale Wirtschaftswachstum auswirken. Ein zügiger Wissens- und Technologietransfer schafft einen entscheidenden regionalen Wettbewerbsvorteil. Bayern hat sich in den vergangenen Jahrzehnten zu einem bedeutenden Wirtschafts- und Innovationsstandort in Deutschland entwickelt: Die jährlichen Wachstumsraten des Bruttoinlandsprodukts liegen deutlich über dem Durchschnitt in Deutschland, die Arbeitslosenquoten sind gemeinsam mit denen vom Nachbarland Baden-Württemberg im bundesdeutschen Vergleich am niedrigsten, und der Lebensstandard, gemessen als BIP pro Kopf, ist in Bayern unter den Flächenstaaten am höchsten. Während im Bundesdurchschnitt die FuE-Quote bei ca. 2,5% liegt, ist sie in Bayern bei knapp 3% und soll bis zum Jahr 2020 auf 3,6% erhöht werden.Technologietransfer, Wissenstransfer, Innovation, Wirtschaftswachstum, Bayern

    On some problems involving Hardy's function

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    Some problems involving the classical Hardy function Z(t):=ζ(1/2+it)(χ(1/2+it))1/2,ζ(s)=χ(s)ζ(1s) Z(t) := \zeta(1/2+it)\bigl(\chi(1/2+it)\bigr)^{-1/2}, \quad \zeta(s) = \chi(s)\zeta(1-s) are discussed. In particular we discuss the odd moments of Z(t)Z(t), the distribution of its positive and negative values and the primitive of Z(t)Z(t). Some analogous problems for the mean square of ζ(1/2+it)|\zeta(1/2+it)| are also discussed.Comment: 15 page
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