Results 251 to 260 of about 477,541 (310)

Stochastic responses and marginal valuation. [PDF]

open access: yesProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
Hansen LP, Souganidis P.
europepmc   +1 more source

Economic Valuation of Shoreline

The Review of Economics and Statistics, 1977
SHORELINE development is a growing public policy issue in many urban areas. While there is some published research on a related topic, the importance of ambient water quality, economists have not yet turned their attention to the economic significance of the existence and width of the undeveloped apron offering public use and access to bodies of water ...
Brown, Gardner M, Jr   +1 more
openaire   +1 more source

Economics: Allocation or Valuation?

Journal of Economic Issues, 1974
This chapter suggests that the case of economics, schizophrenia always has been latent in the discipline and has been kept that way only by sweeping under the rug important problems which increasingly have crept out to disturb the neat world of economist and econometrician alike.
openaire   +1 more source

Economic valuation of product features

Quantitative Marketing and Economics, 2013
We develop a market-based paradigm to value the enhancement or addition of features to a product. We define the market value of a product or feature enhancement as the change in the equilibrium profits that would prevail with and without the enhancement. Conjoint data can be use to construct the demand system necessary to compute equilibrium prices but
Greg M. Allenby   +3 more
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Economic valuation

This chapter deals with economic valuation. Economic value is inherently social and constituted in an interplay of social structures and valuation practices. While the study of social structures helps to understand how economic value is established and set through different social forms (such as markets, ratings, rankings, and contests), the pragmatics
Aspers, Patrik, Dobeson, Alexander
openaire   +3 more sources

Embodied Energy and Economic Valuation

Science, 1980
Input-output analysis has been adapted to calculate the total (direct plus indirect) energy required to produce goods and services in the U.S. economy; this quantity has been termed the embodied energy. Usually, the energy required to produce labor and government services and the solar energy input to the economy are ignored by analysts.
openaire   +2 more sources

Energy Analysis and Economic Valuation *

Southern Economic Journal, 1979
Ever since the oil embargo of 1973-74 everyone speaks of the energy crisis. And whether we are "optimists" or "pessimists", by now most of us recognize that what will happen in the end to this crisis is not an idle question. Only economists still refuse to see the indissoluble relationship between the scarcity of natural resources and the economic ...
openaire   +1 more source

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