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Recreational demand for fishing in the Yellowstone National Park Area : a travel cost modelLowe, Scott Elliot 18 June 1997 (has links)
Potential policy decisions regarding fly fishing in the Yellowstone National Park Area
could severely impact the enjoyment possibilities of many of its users. In order to
determine the magnitude of the impact, this paper applies a form of the basic travel cost
model developed by Bell and Leeworthy [JEEM. 18,189-205 (1990)] to fishing sites in
the Yellowstone National Park Area. Bell and Leeworthy have argued that consumer
demand for the time spent at a recreation site is inversely related to on-site cost per day,
and may be positively related to travel cost per trip. The paper discusses relevant
literature on the method, presents background information on the site, and generates a
demand curve for users of the resource. A consumer surplus measurement is then derived
from the resulting demand data, which gives an estimate for the value of the resource; the
consumer surplus is determined to be roughly $751.88 per day spent at the site. The
assumptions of the model are then discussed, and an assessment is made of the potential
policy implications. / Graduation date: 1998
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Topics in applied microeconomics : estimating the value of commercial land and testing the efficiency of the U.S. Motor Carrier industryLee, Man-keung 11 June 1997 (has links)
This thesis consists of two essays on applied microeconomics issues. The first
essay presents a hedonic price econometric model of vacant commercial land. The second
essay presents cost frontier analysis on the industry and firm's performance of the U.S.
Motor Carrier industry.
Our hedonic price econometric model includes two new developments in estimating
land values in a multicentric urban area First, two composite indexes of market
accessibility and highway accessibility are developed to account for the impacts of different
characteristics of different regional nodes on land value at a particular site. Second, we use
nonlinear least squares to estimate the decay parameters of the accessibility indexes within
the model. We found that market accessibility is the dominant land value determinant. The
estimated market accessibility decay parameter is different in value from the ones that are
commonly assumed in hedonic models. The effect of access to highway interchanges is
insignificant. Corner lots are of higher value. Finally, under Seattle's zoning policy,
zoning classification of neighborhood commercial and community commercial land does
not have significant effect on land value.
The second essay uses the stochastic cost frontiers to analyze the performance of
the U.S. motor carrier industry in the pre- and post-MCA periods. The average industry
inefficiencies were between 14 and 27 percent during studied period. Our results indicate
that the deregulation has no impact on industry efficiency. After a short adjustment period,
the average industry inefficiency in the post-MCA years falls back to its pre-MCA level of
around 14 to 16 percent. We analyzed the firm-specific inefficiencies by tobit regression.
Our result shows that union firms are 1.5 and 4 percent less efficient than non-union firms
in the pre- and post-MCA years, respectively. Firms located in the southern region are
relatively efficient and the ones in the northern regions are relatively inefficient. Our result
supports Stigler's Survivor Principle that survivor firms are relatively efficient. / Graduation date: 1998
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Topics in international trade : the economic and environmental effect of capital liberalization in developing countriesCho, Bong-jae 09 January 1996 (has links)
This paper uses general equilibrium static and dynamic
models to examine the economic and environmental effect of
capital liberalization policy based on the general
equilibrium static and dynamic models. The first topic
develops a static general equilibrium model of a small open
economy in the presence of unemployment with three sectors:
a nontradeable sector, a tradeable sector, and an
environmental sector. In the second section, I use a dynamic
general equilibrium model of a small open economy in the
presence of unemployment with three sectors: an importable
sector, an exportable sector, and an environmental sector.
In the last section I analyze the environmental effect of a
developing country's capital liberalization policy when the
consumer values the environment.
The dynamic model, based on intertemporal
optimization, focuses on the role of how land development is
affected by foreign capital investment. The time-varying
dynamic policies, such as planned permanent and planned
gradual capital liberalization, are investigated to analyze
the dynamic path of land and foreign capital stock in the
short-run.
The major findings of this paper are described as
follows. In the long-run dynamic analysis, the production of
the environmental good in a developing country is reduced
when the developing country has a positive net income effect
due to further capital liberalization, if there is an
initial shortage of capital investment. The reduction of the
environmental good might have a significant welfare impacts
on the welfare of a country if the consumer places high
value on the environment. This result indicates that
countries with less environmental awareness are likely to
improve the welfare of their countries whereas countries
with strong environmental awareness are likely to reduce the
welfare of their countries with capital liberalization. The
other important result is that inclusion of the environment
in the consumer's utility function slows down the pace of
land development in the short-run dynamic model if the
developing country lowers its capital investment tax rate. / Graduation date: 1996
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Explaining divergence of service prices in developing countriesPakotiprapha, Sauwaluck 30 April 1993 (has links)
In explaining why service prices differ across countries
(both developed and developing countries), most studies have
paid attention to the role of structural variables such as
population, trade balance, resource abundance etc., by using
a full employment assumption. Due to the existence of high
urban unemployment in developing countries, the assumption of
full employment is not suitable.
The objective of this study is to build general equilibrium
models that can be used to explain the service price
differences across developing countries by incorporating
rural-urban migration and urban unemployment. Internal
migration from rural to urban areas is allowed because of
distortions in labor market. The current work includes
structural variables that are used in the literature, such as
agricultural land, mineral resources, labor endowment, trade
deficit, population, and tourism, along with 2 new variables,
manufacturing capital and services capital. This study also
considers the effects of macroeconomic policies (fiscal and
monetary policies) on service prices which are neglected in
the literature.
The theoretical models suggest that, ceteris paribus,
larger land area, mineral resources, higher trade deficits,
tourist receipts, and money supply increase service prices,
but larger populations reduce service prices. The effects of
services capital, labor force, the terms of trade, and
government spending are ambiguous from the theoretical models.
An empirical study is performed to test the theoretical
implications. The empirical results suggest that larger
endowments of land, mineral resources, manufacturing capital,
labor force, and services capital, as well as higher trade
deficits, tourist receipts, government spending, and money
supply increase the service prices. Conversely, larger
populations reduce service prices as predicted. / Graduation date: 1993
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Incomes and outcomes : the dynamic interaction of the marriage market and the labor marketLiu, Jing, 1979- 28 September 2012 (has links)
In this thesis we study the interdependency of individual decisions on work and family, particularly the dynamic interaction of the marriage market and the labor market. My basic idea is that marital status affects individual labor supply decisions, and in turn, labor market condition influences marriage formation and dissolution. While these interactions are evident, the overwhelming majority of research on labor or family economics usually simplifies the individual decision-making by assuming that one of two markets outcomes is given while studying the other one. In the empirical study, endogeneity issues are troublesome, especially under the dynamic setting. My work takes a different approach. I directly model the individual decision-making, which describes how marriage market and labor market interact with each other; and matching with survey data we empirically recover the underlying economic environments that characterize the structure of the marriage market and the labor market. I further examine to what extent my model explains the observed facts. Very few studies have been conducted to explore work and family issues in this direction partly due to its complexity. The structural models, besides the conventional regression, improve our perceptions on how individuals form decisions on work and family, which have far-reaching implications on policy designs and welfare evaluations. In my thesis, I explore all these issues in three steps. In chapter 1, I explain a stylized fact that there exists a positive correlation between rising wage inequality and declining marriage rates. A two-sided matching model is developed to exploit a theoretical channel through which wage inequality affects marriage rates. My model features a steady state equilibrium in which the whole marriage market is divided into groups and only people in the same group will marry each other. Using the Integrated Public Use Microdata Series (IPUMS) data from 1970 to 2000, my estimates indicate that a structural change occurs in the U.S. marriage market. The higher matching efficiency and declining elasticity of men suggest that the nowadays marriage market provides more chance to meet and better gender equity, though higher arrival rates also raise the outside options of getting married. Additionally, I find that wage inequality accounts for over 38% of the decline in marriage rate, which is underestimated in Gould (2003). Chapter 2 examines household dynamic labor supply after introducing bargaining between husbands and wives, which has not been thoroughly studied previously in literature. Here bargaining between husbands and wives determines the amount of husbands' earnings that are transferred to wives for their private consumption. A household search model that incorporates the intrahousehold bargaining is developed and estimated using panel data from the year 2001 Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP). My results show that the portion of household income shared by husbands for private consumption is responsive to their employment status, suggesting the existence of the bargaining between the U.S. couples. My findings also imply that the labor supply of women will increase with higher women wage and lower money transfer from husbands to wives, showing that the income effect dominates for wives. Moreover, the wage frontier of husbands is positively correlated with wives' wages and negatively correlated with husbands' earnings transferred to wives, highlighting that husbands are subject to both the income effect and intra-household bargaining, and their decisions depend on which effect dominates. In the third and the last chapter, I study household unemployment duration. Previously, most studies have addressed the topic of job search at the individual level. This chapter studies job search patterns of married couples and in particular compares couple's unemployment duration given their spousal earnings. A household search model is introduced, which includes the bargaining between husbands and wives. I use the year 2001 panel data Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) to estimate the structural model of family decisions. Our findings reveal that there exists a gender asymmetry in job search of the U.S. household: The more husbands earn, the longer wives search for a job; but the more wives earn, the sooner husbands find a job. / text
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Three essays on openness, international pricing, and optimal monetary policyEvans, Richard William, 1975- 29 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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The office property market of Hong Kong: an econometric analysisKempf, Simon P. January 2004 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / toc / Real Estate and Construction / Master / Master of Science in Real Estate and Construction
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Financial flows, macroeconomic policy and the agricultural sector in Sub-Saharan AfricaAboagye, Anthony Q. Q. January 1998 (has links)
This thesis focuses on the effects of development assistance (ODA), private foreign commercial capital (PFX), domestic savings (SAV), the openness of the economy and producer prices on agricultural output, and on export and domestic shares of agricultural output in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). This study uses panel data spanning 27 countries and the period 1970 to 1993. / The production function is a Cobb-Douglas type. Static export and domestic share equations are derived from a specification of the agricultural gross domestic product function. Transformed auto-regressive distributed-lag versions of the static share models are used to investigate long-run dynamics, persistence and implementation lags in the share response model. / Agricultural output is affected as follows. ODA, PFX and SAV have small positive or negative impact depending on agricultural region or economic policy environment. The impact of openness of the economy is negative in all agricultural regions, however, there is evidence of positive effect of openness within improved policy environment. None of these effects are statistically significant. / Export share is affected as follows. ODA, PFX and SAV have small positive impact in some agricultural regions and policy environments, both in the short-run and in the long-run. PFX is not significant anywhere. ODA is significant only when countries are grouped by policy environment in the short-run. SAV is significant in the short-run only in some regions, and significant in the long-run only in others. Openness has positive impact in the short-run. This is significant in many regions. Its long-run impact is mostly positive but not significant anywhere. The impact of producer price is mostly positive but not significant. / Efforts to encourage economic activities in rural communities such as improvements in domestic terms of trade in favor of agriculture, together with the provision of infrastructure are likely to stimulate output. Strategies to diversify and process agricultural exports in the face of falling agricultural commodity prices should be pursued.
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The determination of blue collar wages in MontrealCalabrese, Tony, 1968- January 1995 (has links)
This exploratory research examines the wage effects of a variety of measures thought to be important in the employment income determination process. It does this by using ordinary least squares multiple regression techniques to construct wage equations for two samples of blue-collar workers in Montreal. Blue-collar wage equations are constructed for: (i) the Montreal labour market and (ii) the Montreal food processing industry. / The results of this study show that Montreal blue-collar wages are determined by a variety of factors. Most importantly, however, are the wage effects exhibited by a worker's gender, union membership status and whether or not a worker has received a promotion from his/her present employer. These factors show statistically significant effects on the wages of blue-collar workers in the Montreal labour market as well as on the wages of blue-collar workers in the Montreal food processing industry. The present research also finds that certain factors have distinct wage effects on the different samples of blue-collar workers examined. Data from the present study indicates that the wages of Montreal blue-collar workers are influenced primarily by: (i) on-the-job training, (ii) promotions received, (iii) job opportunities available, (iv) an interruption in one's studies, (v) trade union membership and (vi) gender. While the wages of blue-collar workers employed specifically in the Montreal-area food processing industry are affected principally by: (i) the use of computers, (ii) the use of machines, (iii) promotions received, (iv) a varied work experience, (v) trade union membership, (vi) marital status and (vii) gender. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
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An econometric analysis of consumer demand for fresh papayas in the Los Angeles metropolitan areaMacario, Margarita Cosme January 1985 (has links)
Typescript. / Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 1985. / Bibliography: leaves 209-214. / Photocopy. / Microfilm. / xiii, 214 leaves, bound
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