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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

La vie et l'oeuvre d'Anna Akhmatova comme un phénomène de l'opposition intellectuelle en URSS

Edelman, Marina 25 April 2018 (has links)
Ce mémoire est une contribution à l'étude de la position des intellectuels critiques en Union Soviétique depuis ses débuts jusqu'aux années 1960. De ce point de vue, nous examinons la vie et l'oeuvre d'Anna Akhmatova (1889-1966), un grand poète du XX-ème siècle. Nous cherchons d'abord à préciser les liens d'Akhmatova avec certaines tendances intellectuelles russes des époques précédentes, et surtout avec la tradition pouchkinovienne dont elle s'estimait être l'héritière directe, et ce non seulement sur le plan littéraire, mais également quant à la place et au rôle du poète dans la société. En deuxième lieu, nous analysons comment Akhmatova, placée dans le contexte politique de l'époque soviétique, a interprété et développé cette tradition intellectuelle. / Québec Université Laval, Bibliothèque 2013
12

International Comparisons of Household Saving Rates and Hidden Income

Walther, Herbert, Stiassny, Alfred 01 1900 (has links) (PDF)
In this paper, we argue that shadow activities and different levels of marketization of household production systematically distort international comparisons of aggregate gross household saving rates (HSRs): Higher shares of hidden income increase observed HSRs. Panel data for 18 (24) OECD-countries covering a period of a decade show that gross HSRs are positively related to the degree of corruption(used as a proxy for the propensity to shift economic activities into the shadow) and to the share of income from property and self employment. At the same time, gross HSRs are negatively related to the female employment rate, the ratio of indirect taxes to direct taxes, and to the tax wedge. One plausible story behind these phenomena might be that unobserved consumption and wages in the shadow labor market induce an upward bias in observed HSRs and profit shares, while the price level effects of a higher share of indirect taxes and a 'welfare state' effect lower observed HSRs. (authors' abstract) / Series: Department of Economics Working Paper Series
13

Rich and Ever Richer: Differential Returns Across Socio-Economic Groups

Ederer, Stefan, Mayerhofer, Maximilian, Rehm, Miriam 06 1900 (has links) (PDF)
This paper estimates rates of return across the gross wealth distribution in eight European countries. Like differential saving rates, differential rates of return matter for Post Keynesian theory, because they impact the income and wealth distribution and add an explosive element to growth models. We show that differential rates of return matter empirically by merging data on household balance sheets with long-run returns for individual asset categories. We find that (1) the composition of wealth differentiates between three socioeconomic groups: 30% are asset-poor, 65% are middle-class home owners, and the top 5% are business-owning capitalists; (2) rates of return rise across all groups; and (3) rates of return broadly follow a log-shaped function across the distribution, where inequality in the lower half of the distribution is higher than in the upper half. If socioeconomic groups are collapsed into the bottom 95% workers and top 5% capitalists, then rates of return are 5.6% for the former and 7.2% for the latter. / Series: Ecological Economic Papers
14

Rich and Ever Richer: Differential Returns Across Socio-Economic Groups

Ederer, Stefan, Mayerhofer, Maximilian, Rehm, Miriam 06 1900 (has links) (PDF)
This paper estimates rates of return across the gross wealth distribution in eight European countries. Like differential saving rates, differential rates of return matter for Post Keynesian theory, because they impact the income and wealth distribution and add an explosive element to growth models. We show that differential rates of return matter empirically by merging data on household balance sheets with long-run returns for individual asset categories. We find that (1) the composition of wealth differentiates between three socioeconomic groups: 30% are asset-poor, 65% are middle-class home owners, and the top 5% are business-owning capitalists; (2) rates of return rise across all groups; and (3) rates of return broadly follow a log-shaped function across the distribution, where inequality in the lower half of the distribution is higher than in the upper half. If socioeconomic groups are collapsed into the bottom 95% workers and top 5% capitalists, then rates of return are 5.6% for the former and 7.2% for the latter. / Series: Ecological Economic Papers
15

The finance-dominated accumulation regime, income distribution and the present crisis

Stockhammer, Engelbert January 2009 (has links) (PDF)
The paper discusses the interactions of changes in income distribution and the accumulation dynamics in the post-Fordist accumulation regime in OECD countries, which is characterized by deregulated financial markets. The neoliberal mode of regulation came with a decisive shift in power relations at the expense of labor, which is clearly reflected in the fall of wage shares across OECD economies. The notion of a "finance-dominated" accumulation regime is proposed to highlight that financial developments crucially shape the pattern and the pace of accumulation. Financial globalization has relaxed balance of payment constraints and thereby allowed the build up of big international imbalances. The combination of real wage moderation and financial liberalization has led to different strategies (or at least outcomes) in different countries. While some countries (like the USA) exhibit a credit-fuelled consumption-driven growth model that comes with large current account deficits, others (like Germany and Japan) show an export-driven growth model with modest consumption growth and large current account surpluses. Overall the finance-dominated accumulation regime is characterized by a mediocre growth performance and by a high degree of fragility. (author´s abstract) / Series: Department of Economics Working Paper Series

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