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For-Profit Democracy, 2018
This chapter discusses for-profit democracy, in which the utilitarian rule of the most people and the greatest profit defines the government's purpose. It focuses on nuclear power as an outcome of for-profit democracy.
L. Ashwood
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This chapter discusses for-profit democracy, in which the utilitarian rule of the most people and the greatest profit defines the government's purpose. It focuses on nuclear power as an outcome of for-profit democracy.
L. Ashwood
semanticscholar +1 more source
Oxford Economic Papers, 1978
Abstract Wages and profits must be regarded as simultaneously determined—profits must not be regarded as a residual. In the short period both are determined by current demand, profits fluctuating much more strongly than wages. More important is the long-period factor, which depends upon capital-labor substitution elasticity.
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Abstract Wages and profits must be regarded as simultaneously determined—profits must not be regarded as a residual. In the short period both are determined by current demand, profits fluctuating much more strongly than wages. More important is the long-period factor, which depends upon capital-labor substitution elasticity.
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Who Profits from Not-For-Profits: A Reconsideration
Health Services Management Research, 1989‘Who profits from nonprofits?’ asked Herzlinger and Krasker in a recent Harvard Business Review article. Their study examined whether not-for-profit hospitals achieve the intended social goals for which they are subsidised by society. In this paper, we report a reconsideration of Herzlinger and Krasker's question.
Adam G. Skelton+2 more
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2011
I would like here to consider responsibility in the realm of non-profit organizations — not only charities, but also those organizations that exist to make money for those they represent, such as business and worker unions. Let’s first state, once and for all, that non-profit is not no-profit.
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I would like here to consider responsibility in the realm of non-profit organizations — not only charities, but also those organizations that exist to make money for those they represent, such as business and worker unions. Let’s first state, once and for all, that non-profit is not no-profit.
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1987
Il testo ricostruisce le diverse posizioni proposte in letteratura sulla relazione tra i saggi di interesse e di profitto dai tempi di A. Smith e evidenzia la possibilità che una determinazione autonomia dei saggi di interesse da parte delle autorità moentarie incida direttamente sulle variabili ...
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Il testo ricostruisce le diverse posizioni proposte in letteratura sulla relazione tra i saggi di interesse e di profitto dai tempi di A. Smith e evidenzia la possibilità che una determinazione autonomia dei saggi di interesse da parte delle autorità moentarie incida direttamente sulle variabili ...
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Taxation of profits when there are profits
Economics Letters, 2010Abstract Profits taxes fall on both pure profits and the use of capital as an input. Simulations of a Cournot oligopoly suggest that gains from the former are not outweighed by losses from the latter.
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1999
Abstract Compares the profits and profitability of the largest British, French and German companies. The analysis is based on net published profits. Given their larger size, British companies tended to generate higher profits than their continental counterparts throughout the twentieth century.
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Abstract Compares the profits and profitability of the largest British, French and German companies. The analysis is based on net published profits. Given their larger size, British companies tended to generate higher profits than their continental counterparts throughout the twentieth century.
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1985
Risk arises in particular types of production (e.g. oil-drilling) and where production takes place in advance of an uncertain demand. ‘Entrepreneurship’ accepts this risk, and it has to be paid at least its opportunity cost — ‘normal profit’. The size of normal profit will vary according to the degree of risk involved and the willingness of people to ...
J. Harvey, M. K. Johnson
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Risk arises in particular types of production (e.g. oil-drilling) and where production takes place in advance of an uncertain demand. ‘Entrepreneurship’ accepts this risk, and it has to be paid at least its opportunity cost — ‘normal profit’. The size of normal profit will vary according to the degree of risk involved and the willingness of people to ...
J. Harvey, M. K. Johnson
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Bridging the For-Profit and Not-for-Profit Arts
The Journal of Arts Management, Law, and Society, 1999(1999). Bridging the For-Profit and Not-for-Profit Arts. The Journal of Arts Management, Law, and Society: Vol. 29, The Not-for-Profit and For-Profit Arts: Current Collaborations and Future Prospects, pp. 97-100.
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