Results 181 to 190 of about 377,704 (237)

Computational general equilibrium analysis and economic reasoning [PDF]

open access: possibleSwiss Journal of Economics and Statistics, 1996
This paper complements and extends an article by FELDER and SCHLEINIGER (FS) previously published in this journal. We show that the results of FS depend crucially on parameter values. Furthermore we perform simulations of optimal tax reforms in the context of the FS-framework, differentiating between public finance and ecological aspects.
Gliesmann, Christian, Ruocco, Anna
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Computational experience with general equilibrium problems

Computational Optimization and Applications, 1996
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Bachem, A.   +3 more
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Computing General Equilibrium Prices for Spatial Economies

The Review of Economics and Statistics, 1977
THE monocentric urban area is without doubt the best known theoretical construct in the literature of urban economics. Many variations exist, but all share certain basic features: a city is located about a node on an otherwise featureless plain. This node, the Central Business District (CBD), is the only concentrated place-or even the only place-of ...
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Explicitly Spatial Rural‐Urban Computable General Equilibrium

American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 1999
Rural areas are by definition remote, sparsely populated, and dependent on natural-resource-based industry. Rural remoteness and low density have critical implications for rural firms and households. On the plus side for businesses, rural firms avoid high urban wages, rents, and other congestion costs.
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Algorithmic foundations of computable general equilibrium theory

Applied Mathematics and Computation, 2006
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
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Interregional Computable General Equilibrium Models

2009
The theory of general equilibrium in economics has its origin in the work of the classical economists. The perception of its most important implication, that competitive markets can achieve an allocation of resources that is efficient in some sense, is present in Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations, 1776. Although Leon Walras (1874) and Edgeworth (1881)
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Computable general equilibrium with financial markets [PDF]

open access: possibleEconomic Theory, 2001
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
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