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The economic feasibility of adding additional meat packing facilities in ArizonaJohnson, Marvin Donald, 1928- January 1957 (has links)
No description available.
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An evaluation of the methods of merchandise controlDevine, Mildred C., 1914- January 1959 (has links)
No description available.
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Marketing feeder cattle in ArizonaBruner, John Marston, 1933- January 1959 (has links)
No description available.
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The effects of federal income taxes on Arizona cattle ranch investmentsGatz, Jimmie Ray, 1941- January 1966 (has links)
No description available.
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Decline of the cotton exports of the United StatesBootes, William Augustine, 1916- January 1940 (has links)
No description available.
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A practical control plan for small retail businessesHutchins, Paul Dudley, 1912- January 1947 (has links)
No description available.
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Aspects of Late Helladic sea tradeBachhuber, Christoph Stephen 30 September 2004 (has links)
The trade mechanisms joining the Mycenaean Aegean to the greater Levant have intrigued and eluded Bronze Age scholarship since the earliest discoveries of foreign objects in Mycenaean burials. In the past decade, topics of interregional trade in the eastern Mediterranean have enjoyed renewed discussions, inspired in no small part by the excavation of the Uluburun shipwreck. Data generated from the shipwreck is amounting to an extraordinary body of evidence for contact between the Aegean and the Near East. The proposed Mycenaean presence on board the Uluburun ship requires that the sum of evidence and hypotheses for trade between the two regions be re-examined. By attempting to demonstrate the role the Mycenaeans had performed on the last journey of the Uluburun ship, an important mechanism of trade may be revealed between the Aegean and Semitic worlds.
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The effects of imports on United States groundfish prices.Houtsma, John Johannes. January 1970 (has links)
No description available.
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Essays on international trade and factor mobility in the presence of a public inputAnwar, Sajid 11 1900 (has links)
Governments spend large sums of monies on various services
provided to both firms and households. However, most open economy
studies do not take government spending on industries into account.
The present study deals exclusively with government spending on
industries. This spending is incorporated into neoclassical
production functions in terms of a public input. The purpose of
this thesis is three fold: (i) to investigate the impact of terms of-
trade changes in a small public input economy;(ii)to explore
the international transmission of government spending on public
inputs; and (iii) to examine the relationship between government
spending on public inputs and the pattern of international trade.
The thesis consists of three essays. In a three-period
setting, the first essay examines the impact of terms-of-trade
changes on the allocation of resources in a small open economy. The
private sector of the economy produces two final goods by means of
private inputs and a public input. The public input is produced by
the public sector. The allocation of resources between the private
and public sectors is endogenous and the public input is supplied
with a lag of one period. The essay demonstrates that the timing of
terms-of-trade changes is critical. The impact of terms-of-trade
changes in the presence of labour unemployment is also considered.
The second essay develops a two-country, one-good, and two factor
general equilibrium model with a pure public input and
international factor mobility. International transmission of
government spending on a pure public input and the implications of
potential international coordination are investigated in the short-run
and the long-run. The essay also considers the international
transmission of government spending on a pure public input in the
context of a three-country model where two countries have formed an
economic union.
The third essay develops a two-country, two-good, and two factor
general equilibrium model with a congestible public input.
The model is used to investigate the relationship between
government spending on a congestible public input and the pattern
of international trade.
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The cattle industry of Martinique : a study in agricultural geography.De Belle, Susan Gail. January 1966 (has links)
It has often been suggested that the humid tropical environment is not very suitable for cattle raising. Gourou (35, pp. 53-54), a geographer, states that these "hot, wet regions" of the world are not naturally adapted to pastoralism, particularly because of the high incidence of disease and the poverty of grasslands deficient in leguminous species. [...]
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