Results 111 to 120 of about 125,590 (273)
Does the European Union ‘Rule the World’? Competition Law Diffusion to Singapore and Hong Kong
ABSTRACT This article examines why Singapore and Hong Kong adopted competition law by testing four diffusion mechanisms: coercion, competition, learning, and the Brussels Effect. Using structured process tracing and extensive archival evidence, it evaluates the distinct observable implications of each mechanism.
Yannis Karagiannis
wiley +1 more source
The Surprising Bias of PPML Estimates of Structural Gravity Models With Two‐Way Fixed Effects
ABSTRACT The previous literature has shown that the Poisson Pseudo‐Maximum Likelihood (PPML) estimator provides consistent and asymptotically unbiased estimates of the parameters of structural gravity models with two‐way fixed effects, although their standard errors need correction.
Ben Shepherd, Tom Zylkin
wiley +1 more source
The Proposed U.S.-South Korea Free Trade Agreement (KORUS FTA): Provisions and Implications [PDF]
[Excerpt] On June 30, 2007, U.S. and South Korean trade officials signed the proposed U.S.-South Korean Free Trade Agreement (KORUS FTA) for their respective countries.
Cooper, William H +3 more
core +8 more sources
Reversal of economic integration: evidence from European Union enlargement
Abstract Empirical models of trade agreements implicitly assume that withdrawal from a trade agreement has an equal and opposite trade effect as accession (i.e., symmetry). With increasing opposition to international economic cooperation, it becomes urgent to test this assumption.
Hinnerk Gnutzmann +2 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Chagas disease remains a significant public health challenge in various endemic regions of Latin America. The persistence of vector‐borne transmission highlights the complexity of the issue and the limitations of traditional strategies. In this context, entomological surveillance plays a strategic and multifaceted role, not only in the early ...
Daniel Rodrigo de Lima Gomes +9 more
wiley +1 more source
This article seeks to explain why the Free Trade Agreement negotiation between Australia and China has been extremely difficult, despite political goodwill from Beijing and Canberra. It first argues that the reason for the slow progress of the negotiation is not caused by lack of motivation from the Chinese government.
openaire +3 more sources
THE EFFECTS OF THE FREE TRADE AGREEMENT AMONG CHINA, JAPAN AND SOUTH KOREA [PDF]
A computable general equilibrium model is used to evaluate the economic effects of a free trade agreement among China, Japan, and South Korea on the world economy.
Bongsik Sul, Hyun Joung Jin, Won W. Koo
core
The Impact of Locus of Control on Voluntary Retirement Savings—Evidence for Switzerland
ABSTRACT This study examines determinants of voluntary, tax‐privileged retirement savings in Switzerland by analyzing voluntary participation in so called Pillar 3a accounts. Using longitudinal data from the nationally representative Swiss Household Panel, we assess how locus of control, financial conditions of a person, and tax incentives shape ...
Roland Hofmann, Michaela Tanner
wiley +1 more source
This paper aims to analyze trade creation and trade diversion effects of future VietnamEU FTA, in a framework of negotiations from 2012 to ensure an effective environment for trade and investment.
Binh Duong Nguyen +2 more
doaj
The Impacts of an East Asia FTA on Foreign Trade in East Asia [PDF]
This paper attempts to examine the impact of an East Asia FTA on trade patterns in East Asia by using a multi-sector computable general equilibrium model.
Kozo Kiyota, Shujiro Urata
core

