The American Economic Review, Volume 85,Edições 1-3American Economic Association, 1995 |
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Página 32
... higher than in other countries . Some of the higher health spending is certainly due to higher incomes in the United States . This is not the whole explanation , however . An or- dinary least - squares ( OLS ) regression of the ...
... higher than in other countries . Some of the higher health spending is certainly due to higher incomes in the United States . This is not the whole explanation , however . An or- dinary least - squares ( OLS ) regression of the ...
Página 214
... higher self- or part - time employment , or lower partici- pation rates . Self - employment and part - time employment rates are similar in Spain and Portugal . Participation rates are actually much higher in Portugal than in Spain , 68 ...
... higher self- or part - time employment , or lower partici- pation rates . Self - employment and part - time employment rates are similar in Spain and Portugal . Participation rates are actually much higher in Portugal than in Spain , 68 ...
Página 406
return with respect to price is higher for states in which the total return is higher ( as would be the case with demand - intercept , but not unit - cost , shocks ) . Starting from a position of zero debt , a small increase in debt by ...
return with respect to price is higher for states in which the total return is higher ( as would be the case with demand - intercept , but not unit - cost , shocks ) . Starting from a position of zero debt , a small increase in debt by ...
Índice
Evidence? | 17 |
Dan Kovenock and Gordon Phillips | 403 |
The Effect of Institutions on Economic Behavior | 409 |
Direitos de autor | |
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aggregate analysis assume average behavior benefits bill rate Bretton Woods Cambridge cartels central bank cheap talk choice coefficient consumption contract correlation cost countries deutsche mark drug effect employment equation estimates evidence expected fiat money firms forecast genotype growth households human capital hypothesis implies incentive income increase individual industry inflation investment Journal of Economic labor market lagged liquidity constraints marginal Medicaid ment minimum wage monetary policy monomorphic Nash equilibrium National nomic nontraded null hypothesis optimal output paper payoff function percent player political population preferences problem quota ratio reduce regression relative Research response revenue risk Robert sample sector shocks significant social Solow residuals spending statistically strategy studies supply shocks symmetric Nash Table tax rates theory tion tive trade University utility variables voters welfare workers y₁ zero