Results 251 to 260 of about 8,001,060 (294)
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Natural implementation in public goods economies
Social Choice and Welfare, 2009zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
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The ‘economy for the common good’, job quality and workers’ well-being in Austria and Germany
Economic and Labour Relations Review, 2021Laia Ollé-Espluga, Markus Hadler
exaly
1996
A public good is one for which there is non-rivalry in consumption, that is, if the good is consumed by individual i, this does not preclude individual j from consuming it. When there is neither exclusion nor free disposal a public good becomes a collective decision whose consequences affect the whole of society.
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A public good is one for which there is non-rivalry in consumption, that is, if the good is consumed by individual i, this does not preclude individual j from consuming it. When there is neither exclusion nor free disposal a public good becomes a collective decision whose consequences affect the whole of society.
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Policy Prescriptions for a Good Economy
, 2014L. Paganetto, P. Scandizzo
semanticscholar +1 more source
Liberty, political economy and good government in Adam Smith
European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 2023Paolo Silvestri +2 more
exaly
Interior matching equilibria in a public good economy: An aggregative game approach
, 2011W. Buchholz, R. Cornes, D. Rübbelke
semanticscholar +1 more source
The adhesion to the Economy for the Common Good: Aligning organizations with values
Business and Society Review, 2021Susana Alves Pereira +2 more
exaly
Decent work’s contribution to the economy for the common good
International Journal of Organizational Analysis, 2020Susana Alves Pereira +2 more
exaly
Voting with Ballots and Feet: Existence of Equilibrium in a Local Public Good Economy
, 1996Hideo Konishi
semanticscholar +1 more source
2015
I propose to address two questions which both target the vital interests of this conference. Firstly, is it possible to analyze Central and Eastern Europe, in the 20th and the 21st centuries, without analyzing socialism? Can we truly understand Central and Eastern Europe, in modernity and for modernity, without understanding socialism? Secondly, can we
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I propose to address two questions which both target the vital interests of this conference. Firstly, is it possible to analyze Central and Eastern Europe, in the 20th and the 21st centuries, without analyzing socialism? Can we truly understand Central and Eastern Europe, in modernity and for modernity, without understanding socialism? Secondly, can we
openaire

