نتایج جستجو برای: i12 i18 i31

تعداد نتایج: 1017  

2010
Stefan Boes Karim Chalak Gary Chamberlain Rustam Ibragimov

This paper analyzes the identifying power of weak convexity assumptions in treatment effect models with endogenous selection. The counterfactual distributions are constrained either in terms of the response function, or conditional on the realized treatment, and sharp bounds on the potential outcome distributions are derived. The methods are applied to bound the effect of education on smoking. ...

2010
Pawel Smialowski Dmitrij Frishman Stefan Kramer

Pitfalls of supervised feature selection Pawel Smialowski1,2,∗, Dmitrij Frishman1,2 and Stefan Kramer3 1Department of Genome Oriented Bioinformatics, Technische Universität München Wissenschaftszentrum Weihenstephan, Am Forum 1, 85350 Freising, 2Helmholtz Zentrum Munich, National Research Center for Environment and Health, Institute for Bioinformatics, Ingolstädter Landstraße 1, 85764 Neuherber...

2008
Angelo Antoci Pier Luigi Sacco Paolo Vanin

We introduce social capital accumulation into a neoclassical model, showing how it differs from physical and human capital accumulation. We take the view that social capital is crucial to the enjoyment of socially provided goods and that it is mainly accumulated by means of participation to social activities. Under-investment in social capital may lead a growing economy to fall into a social po...

2007
Jonathan Gardner Andrew J. Oswald Jing Qian

How do workers make wage comparisons? Both an experimental study and an analysis of 16,000 British employees are reported. Satisfaction and well-being levels are shown to depend on more than simple relative pay. They depend upon the ordinal rank of an individual’s wage within a comparison group. ‘Rank’ itself thus seems to matter to human beings. Moreover, consistent with psychological theory, ...

2009
Juergen Jung Chung Tran

This is the supplement to the paper “The Macroeconomics of Health Savings Accounts” by the same authors. We present a short history of Health Savings Accounts (HSAs), describe the solution algorithm, and illustrate details about the estimation technique for the Markov transition matrices of the health shocks. JEL: H51, I18, I38,

2011
Rainer Winkelmann

Traditional tools of welfare economics identify the envy-related welfare loss from conspicuous consumption only under very strong assumptions. Measured income and life satisfaction offers an alternative for estimating such consumption externalities. The approach is developed in the context of luxury car consumption (Ferraris and Porsches) in Switzerland. Results from household panel data and fi...

2008
Alpaslan Akay Peter Martinsson

Does Relative Income Matter for the Very Poor? Evidence from Rural Ethiopia We studied whether relative income has an impact on subjective well-being among extremely poor people. Contrary to the findings in developed countries, where relative income has shown a significant and negative impact on subjective well-being, we cannot reject the hypothesis that relative income has no impact on subject...

2016
Toke S Aidt Vitor Castro Rodrigo Martins

We study the effect of political ideology on sustainable development, measured as investment in genuine wealth, in a dynamic panel of 79 countries between 1981 and 2013. We find that a switch from a left-wing or centrist government to a right-wing government has a robust positive and statistically significant effect on investment in genuine wealth. We find no evidence of opportunistic cycles in...

Journal: :IEEE Trans. Information Theory 1991
Ponani S. Gopalakrishnan Dimitri Kanevsky Arthur Nádas David Nahamoo

The well-known Baum-Eagon inequality I31 provides an effective iterative scheme for finding a local maximum for homogeneous polynomials with positive coefticients over a domain of probability values. However, in many applications we are interested in maximizing a general rational function. We extend the Baum-Eagon inequality to rational functions. We briefly describe some of the applications of...

2007
Gordon D.A. Brown Jonathan Gardner Andrew J. Oswald Jing Qian Allen Parducci

How do workers make wage comparisons? Both an experimental study and an analysis of 16,000 British employees are reported. Satisfaction and well-being levels are shown to depend on more than simple relative pay. They depend upon the ordinal rank of an individual’s wage within a comparison group. ‘Rank’ itself thus seems to matter to human beings. Moreover, consistent with psychological theory, ...

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