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Analyzing the Effect of R&D on Firm Resilience: Evidence from European Technology FirmsLybæk, Vegard Ranum January 2024 (has links)
This paper investigates the effect of R&D intensity on firm resilience during the COVID-19 recession. I use firm-level data on European technology firms to identify the relation between R&D intensity and resilience, where firm resilience is measured through financial flexibility and firm performance. To investigate deeper into firm performance I distinguish between performance using accounting measures and market performance. I find that R&D intensity has a positive effect on resilience as viewed from accounting measures. I find mixed results regarding performance: No significant positive evidence between R&D intensity and stock performance is found, whereas evidence suggesting a significant non-linear relationship between R&D intensity and return on assets is found. Nevertheless, the results indicate that there seem to be some positive effect of R&D on firm resilience. This is of value to policymakers and corporate managers aiming to enhance firm resilience through strategic R&D investments. Further research with more detailed data are needed to explore the mechanisms behind this relationship.
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The Fiscal Resilience of American CitiesSpencer, Samuel Summers 11 July 2018 (has links)
This paper brings together the concepts of fiscal health and resilience as they are understood in a contemporary context while seeking to establish whether a quantitative model of analysis can be meaningfully derived and applied to major American cities. Using major recessions from 1977 to 2015 as an exogenous shock, the values for fiscal health are assessed temporally to arrive at an assessment for whether a certain group of cities is inherently more resilient than others. Given subjective nature of the concepts used, this paper also grapples with the fact that any results must be analyzed within a local context. The end result is aimed to produce a tool for cities to compare how they performed in the wake of a recession and eventually work towards an understanding of what policy actions can be done to make a city more resilient. / Master of Urban and Regional Planning / This paper brings together the concepts of fiscal health and resilience as they are understood in a contemporary context while seeking to establish whether a quantitative model of analysis can be meaningfully derived and applied to major American cities. Using major recessions from 1977 to 2015 as an exogenous shock, the values for fiscal health are assessed temporally to arrive at an assessment for whether a certain group of cities is inherently more resilient than others. Given subjective nature of the concepts used, this paper also grapples with the fact that any results must be analyzed within a local context. The end result is aimed to produce a tool for cities to compare how they performed in the wake of a recession and eventually work towards an understanding of what policy actions can be done to make a city more resilient.
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Etude démographique économique et sociale de la cité de Toulon du début du XVème siècle au premier tiers du XVIème siècle (1535)Luccioni, Jean 14 December 2012 (has links)
La cité maritime subit le trend de la récession du XIVe siècle jusqu'à son inversion pour celui de la croissance, mutation due, à Toulon, au dynamisme de la draperie et de la construction navale. La croissance, élevée après 1517, se matérialise par la reconstruction des faubourgs. Les options commerciales des négociants, vente d'huile, de draps, de cuirs et peaux, de barques et de petites nefs sur un marché élargi, vont dégager des bénéfices considérables. Les édiles vont contrôler progressivement les maux dont souffre la cité : sa carence en céréales, les épidémies de peste et de lèpre, les menaces de flottes hostiles, la dette contractée, après emprunt, chez les marchands florentins avignonnais. Une oligarchie d'une trentaine de familles, associant notaires et marchands, a dirigé la ville. / The maritime city undergoes the recession's trend of the 15th century until its inversion toward growth, a mutation due to the dynamism of Toulon drapery and shipbuilding. The high growth after 1517 is materialized by the reconstruction of the suburbs. The commercial options of traders, selling oil, sheets, hides and skins, boats and small ships on a wider market, will generate substantial profits. The councilors will gradually control the evills of the city : its deficiencies in cereals, epidemies of plagues and leprosy, threats of hostile fleets, debt after borrowing Florentine merchants in Avignon. An oligarchy of thirty families associating notaries and merchants, led the city during the last century of the middle ages.
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Unreal Investments : How cheap credit is used when rates are already low, and opportunities for financial investments are present.Myles, Joel January 2022 (has links)
This study explores the possibility that cheep credit, provided to firms when profit opportunities on real investments are low, and when opportunities of financial investments are present, will loose some of it’s stimulus effect due to a crowding out effect of financial investments on real investments. Analyzing the changes in debt, and it’s channels of use during the recession of the covid19 pandemic, between firms with a history of stock buybacks, and firms without such a history, the study finds a significantly higher increase in debt for firms with a history of doing stock buybacks. The study concludes that this effect is due to firms finding financial uses of more cheap credit, which does crowd out real investments.
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Reproducing Inequality: Cooking, Cleaning, and Caring in the Austerity AgeSwenson, Haley S. 20 December 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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Business Cycle and Financial Cycle Spillovers in the G7 CountriesAntonakakis, Nikolaos, Breitenlechner, Max, Scharler, Johann 13 March 2015 (has links) (PDF)
In this study we examine the dynamic interactions between credit growth and output growth using the spillover index approach of Diebold and Yilmaz (2012). Based on quarterly data on credit growth and GDP growth over the period 1957Q1
-2012Q4 for the G7 countries we find that: (i) spillovers between credit growth and GDP growth evolve rather heterogeneously over time and across countries, and increase during extreme economic events. (ii) Spillovers between credit growth and GDP growth are of bidirectional nature, indicating bidirectional spillovers of shocks between the financial and the real sector. (iii) In the period shortly before and during the global financial crisis, the link between credit growth and GDP growth becomes more pronounced. In particular, the financial sector plays a dominant role during the early stages of the crisis, while the real sector quickly takes over as the dominant source of spillovers. (iv) Interestingly, credit growth in the US is the dominant transmitter of shocks to the G7 countries, and especially to other G7 countries' real sectors in the run up period to (and during) the global financial crisis. Overall, our results suggest that the magnitude and direction of spillovers between financial cycles and business cycles vary over time along with changes in the economic environment in the G7 countries. (authors' abstract)
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Adding Up the Arts: The Great Recession and the Public-Private Debate in the Funding of America's Art and Art MuseumsKusumowidagdo, Jasmine 01 January 2016 (has links)
The Great Recession dramatically reframed the debate on funding for the arts from a social one to a fiscal one. Instead of social ideology, economics came to the forefront; and fiscal conservatives replaced social conservatives as the loudest voice criticizing government funding for the arts. Under the shadow of an expanding government and staggering national debt, both supporters and critics argue in terms of the economic costs and benefits that the arts impose. These arguments against public funding for the arts are multi-tiered. Critics contend that the government arts agencies are ineffective, that federal arts funding is inefficient, and that government funding as a whole is an unjustified overreach of government. Fiscal conservatives also argue that private philanthropy is sufficient to sustain the arts independently without government involvement. But because public and private funding for the arts respond to recessionary impacts so differently and decreases in private philanthropy impact the arts disproportionately, public arts funding is absolutely justified on an economic basis. With the inclusion of social and political considerations, however, the final conclusion is that neither private nor public funding can or should independently provide a complete solution to the issue.
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The Impact of Economic Crisis on Small and Medium Enterprises: in perspective of Swedish SMEsRatko, Zinaida, Ulgen, Kaan January 2009 (has links)
<p> </p><p><strong>Problem: </strong>Business world has met uncertainty, which settled everywhere: from global financial markets and national economies, to organizations and employees’ minds. As every crisis, this situation came unexpectedly, almost out of a clear blue sky. Sweden, being highly dependent on international development, has faced negative effects in all aspects of business life. SMEs have emerged as an engine of economic and social development throughout the world. As well as more than 99 percent of all enterprises in Sweden are classified as SMEs, the impact of economic crisis may be more than significant.</p><p><strong>Purpose: </strong>The purpose of the study is to investigate the impact of the current economic crisis and recession on the Small and Medium Enterprises in Sweden.</p><p><strong>Method: </strong>In order to fulfill our purpose we combined both techniques – qualitative and quantitative methodological approaches. We used a quantitative analysis tool – survey to collect primary data from the SMEs. In its turn, qualitative analysis was implemented to see how the data from earlier studies and our findings can be interconnected.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>It was found, that companies are facing mostly negative effects. The perception of currently facing economic challenges can be assessed as anxious, which means that companies see the further development in a tough way. Damaged business confidence can be also recognized in pessimistic forecasts for profitability in 2009. However, the crisis can be considered as a driver for change. On the positive way, every downturn and faced challenge, e.g. stressful situation, stimulate organisations to analyze, look for new effective solutions and make decisions in the way they would never thought about. It was found out that importance of crisis planning is distinctly risisng during current times of uncertainty. Futhermore, companies tend to react on the faced challenges by designing, following crisis plans and creating special crisis teams.</p><p>Our research may help the businesses to understand what difficulties the majority is facing, and thus not only to prevent same risks but also turn them into opportunities.</p><p> </p>
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A Call For Attention : External Stakeholder Influence on Executives Within Swedish BanksForsberg, Johan, Verner, Carl-Michael January 2014 (has links)
In 2008, a financial crisis struck the world economy, causing a risk of a potential system-crash. In order to stabilize the financial system within Europe, European Banking Authority (EBA) presented new guidelines (GL44) as a way, among others, to increase the transparency among financial institutions. As a result of GL44, Swedish Financial Supervisory Authority (FSA) implemented new regulations, with minor adjustments and amendments. At present, the guidelines are weeks from being completely implemented, thus meaning that the financial industry is able to start seeing the changes from the regulations.The authors have chosen to conduct a study regarding how the banks have been affected from the external authority demands during the previous recession.The focus of the study has been on three of Sweden’s four large banks, which are considered systematically important, as well as one niche bank.The study showed that the work in board and top-management was affected by external demands from authorities. The attention on business development was disturbed during the recession since more focus was put on controlling factors such as compliance, risk management and internal audit as well as on board composition and board competence.
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The synchronization of GDP growth in the G7 during US recessionsAntonakakis, Nikolaos, Scharler, Johann January 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Using the dynamic conditional correlation (DCC) model due to Engle (2002), we estimate time varying correlations of quarterly real GDP growth among the G7 countries. In general, we find that rather heterogeneous patterns of international synchronization exist during US recessions. During the 2007-2009 recession, however, international co-movement increased substantially. (authors' abstract)
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