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Select data courtesy of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

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International Advances in Economic Research

Subject:
Economics and Econometrics
Publisher:
Springer US —
Springer Journals
ISSN:
1083-0898
Scimago Journal Rank:
27

2023

Volume 29
Issue 3 (Aug)Issue 1-2 (May)

2022

Volume 28
Issue 3-4 (Nov)Issue 1-2 (May)

2021

Volume 27
Issue 4 (Nov)Issue 3 (Aug)Issue 2 (Jul)Issue 1 (Mar)

2020

Volume 26
Issue 4 (Oct)Issue 3 (Aug)Issue 2 (May)Issue 1 (Feb)

2019

Volume 25
Issue 4 (Dec)Issue 3 (Aug)Issue 2 (May)Issue 1 (Feb)

2018

Volume 25
Issue 1 (Nov)
Volume 24
Issue 4 (Sep)Issue 3 (Aug)Issue 2 (May)Issue 1 (Feb)

2017

Volume 23
Issue 4 (Nov)Issue 3 (Jul)Issue 2 (Apr)Issue 1 (Feb)

2016

Volume 23
Issue 1 (Dec)
Volume 22
Issue 4 (Oct)Issue 3 (Jun)Issue 2 (Mar)Issue 1 (Jan)

2015

Volume 22
Issue 1 (Dec)
Volume 21
Issue 4 (Sep)Issue 3 (Jul)Issue 2 (Feb)Issue 1 (Jan)

2014

Volume 21
Issue 1 (Dec)
Volume 20
Issue 4 (Oct)Issue 3 (Jun)Issue 2 (Jan)Issue 1 (Jan)

2013

Volume 20
Issue 2 (Dec)Issue 1 (Jul)
Volume 19
Issue 4 (Jul)Issue 3 (May)Issue 2 (Feb)Issue 1 (Jan)

2012

Volume 19
Issue 2 (Dec)Issue 1 (Nov)
Volume 18
Issue 4 (Jul)Issue 3 (May)Issue 2 (Feb)

2011

Volume 18
Issue 1 (Nov)
Volume 17
Issue 4 (Jul)Issue 3 (Jun)Issue 2 (Apr)Issue 1 (Jan)

2010

Volume 17
Issue 1 (Nov)
Volume 16
Issue 4 (Aug)Issue 3 (Jul)Issue 2 (Feb)

2009

Volume 16
Issue 1 (Oct)
Volume 15
Issue 4 (Jul)Issue 3 (Jun)Issue 2 (Jan)

2008

Volume 16
Issue 1 (Aug)
Volume 15
Issue 2 (Oct)Issue 1 (Sep)
Volume 14
Issue 4 (Aug)Issue 3 (Jul)Issue 2 (Feb)Issue 1 (Jan)

2007

Volume 14
Issue 1 (Dec)
Volume 13
Issue 4 (Sep)Issue 3 (May)Issue 2 (Feb)Issue 1 (Jan)

2006

Volume 13
Issue 1 (Dec)
Volume 12
Issue 4 (Sep)Issue 3 (Jul)Issue 2 (May)Issue 1 (Mar)
Volume 8
Issue 3 (Jan)
Volume 5
Issue 3 (Jan)

2005

Volume 12
Issue 1 (Aug)
Volume 11
Issue 4 (Nov)Issue 3 (Aug)Issue 2 (May)Issue 1 (Mar)
Volume 10
Issue 4 (Dec)Issue 3 (Dec)Issue 2 (Dec)Issue 1 (Dec)
Volume 9
Issue 4 (Dec)Issue 3 (Dec)Issue 2 (Dec)Issue 1 (Dec)
Volume 8
Issue 4 (Dec)Issue 2 (Dec)Issue 1 (Dec)
Volume 7
Issue 4 (Dec)Issue 3 (Dec)Issue 2 (Dec)Issue 1 (Dec)
Volume 6
Issue 4 (Dec)Issue 3 (Dec)Issue 2 (Dec)Issue 1 (Dec)
Volume 5
Issue 4 (Dec)Issue 2 (Dec)Issue 1 (Dec)
Volume 4
Issue 4 (Dec)Issue 3 (Dec)Issue 2 (Dec)Issue 1 (Dec)
Volume 3
Issue 4 (Dec)Issue 3 (Dec)Issue 2 (Dec)Issue 1 (Dec)

1996

Volume 2
Issue 4 (Nov)Issue 3 (Aug)Issue 2 (May)Issue 1 (Feb)

1995

Volume 1
Issue 4 (Nov)Issue 3 (Aug)Issue 2 (May)Issue 1 (Feb)
journal article
Open Access Collection
How to Achieve the Take-off into Sustained Growth: A Case Study for Slovenia

Neck, Reinhard; Weyerstrass, Klaus; Blueschke, Dmitri; Majcen, Boris; Srakar, Andrej; Verbič, Miroslav

2018 International Advances in Economic Research

doi: 10.1007/s11294-018-9678-8

In this paper, we show that successful policy aimed at enhancing economic growth in the long run must be based on policies which improve human capital and technological progress. This is applied to Slovenia, a small open economy in the European Union and the Euro Area. In particular, we investigate how fiscal policies should be designed to support economic growth without violating the European Union Stability and Growth Pact. Using the SLOPOL10 model, an econometric model of the Slovenian economy, we analyse the effects of different fiscal policies in Slovenia over the next few years by means of simulations. The fiscal policy multipliers of the Slovenian economy are small and short-lived, which renders demand-side expansionary fiscal policies inappropriate as a means of achieving higher growth. However, if an increase in government expenditures directly related to technological progress is implemented (such as better funding for tertiary education or subsidies for firms’ investments in research and development), this can trigger a path of output which is permanently higher than that of the baseline simulation. Reducing income taxes and social security contributions has strong positive effects on employment. This result shows that the key to prosperity and sustained growth is investment in human capital and technology, also for a small open economy like Slovenia.
journal article
LitStream Collection
Cooperative R&D and Commitment to A Policy of Know-how Trading

Silva, Mário

2018 International Advances in Economic Research

doi: 10.1007/s11294-018-9683-y

In this paper, we develop a theoretical framework to investigate the impact of adopting a strategy of know-how trading on the degree of research and development (R&D) cooperation. We show that the consequences of cooperation in know-how sharing under the conditions of the model are similar to a policy of cooperation in R&D investments in areas with large spillovers. An industry-wide policy of cooperation among competitors with respect to R&D investment and sharing would simply result in maximal joint profits. This cooperative R&D outcome could be generalized to any degree of spillover other than 100%. In this paper, the commitment to a policy of know-how trading by the participants in an industry is explained by the firm’s attempt to induce the equilibrium of a single industry-wide cooperative research joint venture. In a repeated game framework, we show that pre-commitments by non-cooperative firms to disclose their own know-how to the industry can be effective in inducing cooperative R&D investments by the participants.
journal article
LitStream Collection
Impact of Knowledge Capital on the Production of Hungarian Firms

Katona, Klára

2018 International Advances in Economic Research

doi: 10.1007/s11294-018-9684-x

Several studies identified a positive relationship between a firm’s knowledge assets and its productivity. Knowledge assets are usually considered as the level of human and technological capital of the firm. Knowledge assets of the firm may also increase by the so-called spillover effect, especially in less developed host economies of foreign direct investment, which means diffusion of the technology, knowledge and managerial skills from foreign companies to local ones. Beyond the impact of the human and technological capital of firms, this paper also examines the effect of spillover of knowledge on the firms’ performance in Hungary within a linear regression model. The model is based on individual data of Hungarian enterprises, examining the change in performance as the difference of the variables between 1996 and 2014. The paper shows that knowledge assets (concerning human capital) basically determine the firms’ production in Hungary from 2000. The effect of research and development activity was not significant in the investigated period. Foreign shares in the industries’ total equity (proxy for spillover effect) have a weak and, after 2005, a negative influence on performance. The spillover effect in the Hungarian economy was not demonstrated by the regression model.
journal article
LitStream Collection
Convergence in Income Inequality: Further Evidence from the Club Clustering Methodology across States in the U.S.

Apergis, Nicholas; Christou, Christina; Gupta, Rangan; Miller, Stephen

2018 International Advances in Economic Research

doi: 10.1007/s11294-018-9675-y

This paper contributes to the sparse literature on inequality convergence by empirically testing convergence across states in the U.S. This sample period encompasses a series of different periods that the existing literature discusses -- the Great Depression (1929–1944), the Great Compression (1945–1979), the Great Divergence (1980-present), the Great Moderation (1982–2007), and the Great Recession (2007–2009). This paper implements the relatively new method of panel convergence testing, recommended by Phillips and Sul (2007). This method examines the club convergence hypothesis, which argues that certain countries, states, sectors, or regions belong to a club that moves from disequilibrium positions to their club-specific steady-state positions. We find strong support for convergence through the late 1970s and early 1980s, and then evidence of divergence. The divergence, however, moves the dispersion of inequality measures across states only a fraction of the way back to their levels in the early part of the twentieth century.
journal article
LitStream Collection
Do Morning Classes Improve Student Learning of Microeconomics Principles?

Aldaghir, Mohammed

2018 International Advances in Economic Research

doi: 10.1007/s11294-018-9680-1

This article analyzes the impact of class time on students’ grades by using data from Middle Tennessee State University. The data cover a period of six years and are based on a sample of 5803 individuals who enrolled in 133 sections of principles of microeconomics. To identify the causal impact of class time on students’ grades, I used a bootstrapping method which allowed assigning measures of accuracy to sample estimates. For males, the estimated coefficients were negative and statistically significant at the 10% level, and the coefficients suggested that a male student in an afternoon class could expect to earn a letter grade that is 0.029 points lower than he would have earned by taking the class in the morning. For females, the estimated coefficients were not statistically significant.
journal article
LitStream Collection
International Capital Movement and Monetary Independence in Asia

Nanovsky, Simeon; Kim, Yoonbai

2018 International Advances in Economic Research

doi: 10.1007/s11294-018-9682-z

In this paper, we investigate the extent of monetary independence in a group of ten Asian countries: China, Malaysia, Japan, India, Indonesia, Philippines, Thailand, Korea, Singapore, and Hong Kong. While the traditional investigation has considered only the bivariate relationship between the home interest rate and the base rate, we employ both single-equation and vector autoregressive representations of the bivariate and the trivariate relationship including the desired (or optimal) interest rate. We find in most countries, that the ranking of monetary independence is relatively consistent across the models and methodologies although model specifications produce important differences for some countries such as Japan, Indonesia, and India. Trilemma suggests that a country cannot accomplish all three policy objectives: monetary independence, exchange rate stability, and free capital mobility. To increase monetary independence a country must choose between greater exchange rate flexibility or a lower degree of capital mobility. The fact that China and Malaysia, the two countries that are known to have imposed the strictest capital controls, consistently rank high in various scenarios while Hong Kong, which has maintained nearly the freest regime in capital markets, is lowest in monetary independence, indicates that perhaps capital controls may play a more important role than does exchange rate flexibility in securing independence in monetary policy making. On the other hand, countries that maintain greater exchange rate stability do not necessarily rank low, unless it is combined with greater capital mobility as in the case of Hong Kong.
journal article
LitStream Collection
The Accelerator Theory in a Keynesian Framework Does Not Work

Hochstein, Alan

2018 International Advances in Economic Research

doi: 10.1007/s11294-018-9676-x

journal article
LitStream Collection
Asset Returns and Economic Conditions

Douch, Mohamed

2018 International Advances in Economic Research

doi: 10.1007/s11294-018-9677-9

journal article
LitStream Collection
Transformations in Budgeting Practices: Evidence from the Czech Republic

Popesko, Boris

2018 International Advances in Economic Research

doi: 10.1007/s11294-018-9679-7

journal article
LitStream Collection
Influence of Big Data on Financial Accounting

Horák, Josef; Bokšová, Jiřina

2018 International Advances in Economic Research

doi: 10.1007/s11294-018-9681-0

journal article
LitStream Collection
Headline and Core Inflation: An Empirical Analysis Based on the ECB Survey of Professional Forecasters

Ramos-Herrera, M.; Sosvilla-Rivero, S.

2018 International Advances in Economic Research

doi: 10.1007/s11294-018-9686-8

journal article
LitStream Collection
South-South Trade Agreements and their Effect on Entrepreneurship

Petrova, Kameliia

2018 International Advances in Economic Research

doi: 10.1007/s11294-018-9685-9

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