JER, 第 11 卷Hanyang Economic Research Institute in collaboration with Hanyang University College of Business and Economics, 2006 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 18 筆
第 246 頁
... learning - by - doing considers the strate- gic effect . The most obvious example of sequential markets is ' learning curve model ' , where there are ' joint economies ' so that increased pro- duction by home firm in period 1 reduces ...
... learning - by - doing considers the strate- gic effect . The most obvious example of sequential markets is ' learning curve model ' , where there are ' joint economies ' so that increased pro- duction by home firm in period 1 reduces ...
第 252 頁
2.3 Spillover Learning Effect The learning effects are not entirely ' firm - specific ' . The learning effects spill over from one firm to the other firm through the hiring of rivals ' employees or other channels : we call this ...
2.3 Spillover Learning Effect The learning effects are not entirely ' firm - specific ' . The learning effects spill over from one firm to the other firm through the hiring of rivals ' employees or other channels : we call this ...
第 274 頁
... learning by doing with spillover and the lobbying activity . With these specifications , we showed that the optimal subsidies are lower than without them . The strategic behaviors by the home firm through learning - by - doing and its ...
... learning by doing with spillover and the lobbying activity . With these specifications , we showed that the optimal subsidies are lower than without them . The strategic behaviors by the home firm through learning - by - doing and its ...
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analysis asset risks assume assumption capacity utilization capital stock cash flows cointegrated correlation cost currency composition currency hedge debt debt-asset ratio depreciation derivatives econometric effect EIA experts empirical environmental accidents equation equilibrium expected exponential utility firm's foreign financial assets foreign firm futures market futures prices G(st Hanyang University home and foreign home firm home government i'th currency impulse response incentive increase industry interest rate swaps investment Korea Kt+1 lagged learning-by-doing linear lobbying activity LSTAR model marginal measures non-users null hypothesis optimal subsidy output shock parameters period-1 portfolio precommit predictability price-dividend ratio probability of default production profits prospect theory Real Business Cycle regime regression relative Response of STOCK risk aversion risk exposures risk management second period significant spillover spot price standard deviation statistic stock prices stock returns strategic swap users Table Teräsvirta tion trade transition function utility function volatility