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Book
Government Transfers and Political Support
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Year: 2009 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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Digital
Child labor and the labor supply of other household members: evidence from 1920 America
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ISBN: 0753016680 Year: 2003 Publisher: London Centre for Economic Performance

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Digital
Regional imbalances and aggregate performace in a leading sector model of the labour market: an analysis on Italian data, 1977-1991
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Year: 1998 Publisher: London

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Digital
Just can't get enough: more on skill-biassed change and labour market performance
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Year: 1999 Publisher: London

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Digital
Telecommunication reforms, access regulation, and internet adoption in Latin America
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Year: 2002 Publisher: Washington, D.C. World Bank

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Digital
Intergenerational transfers and household structure: why do most Italian youths live with their parents?
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Year: 2002 Publisher: London LSE Centre for Economic Performance

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Book
Telecommunication reforms, access regulation, and internet adoption in Latin America
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Year: 2002 Publisher: Washington, DC : World Bank,

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The authors review the stylized facts on regulatory reform in telecommunications and its effects on telecommunications development and Internet penetration in Latin America. Relying on data from the International Telecommunication Union, the Information for Development Program (InfoDev), and the World Bank for 1990-99, the authors then test econometrically the determinants of the differences in Internet penetration rates across Latin America. The results show that effective implementation of the reform agenda in telecommunications regulation could accelerate adoption of the Internet in Latin America-even though it is only part of the solution (income levels, income distribution, and access to primary infrastructure are the main determinants of growth in Internet connections and use). Regulation will work by cutting costs. Cost cutting will require that regulators in the region take a much closer look at the design of interconnection rules and at the tradeoffs that emerge from the complex issues involved. It will also require a commitment to developing analytical instruments, such as cost models, to sort out many of the problems. Appropriate cost models will generate benchmarks that are much more consistent with the local issues and with the local cost of capital than international benchmarks will ever be for countries in unstable macroeconomic situations. Cost cutting will require an equally strong commitment to imposing regulatory accounting systems that reduce the information asymmetrics that incumbents use to reduce the risks of entry. All these changes will ultimately require a stronger commitment by competition agencies, since in many countries a failure to negotiate interconnection agreements will raise competition issues just as often as it will raise regulatory questions.


Book
Telecommunication reforms, access regulation, and internet adoption in Latin America
Authors: ---
Year: 2002 Publisher: Washington, DC : World Bank,

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The authors review the stylized facts on regulatory reform in telecommunications and its effects on telecommunications development and Internet penetration in Latin America. Relying on data from the International Telecommunication Union, the Information for Development Program (InfoDev), and the World Bank for 1990-99, the authors then test econometrically the determinants of the differences in Internet penetration rates across Latin America. The results show that effective implementation of the reform agenda in telecommunications regulation could accelerate adoption of the Internet in Latin America-even though it is only part of the solution (income levels, income distribution, and access to primary infrastructure are the main determinants of growth in Internet connections and use). Regulation will work by cutting costs. Cost cutting will require that regulators in the region take a much closer look at the design of interconnection rules and at the tradeoffs that emerge from the complex issues involved. It will also require a commitment to developing analytical instruments, such as cost models, to sort out many of the problems. Appropriate cost models will generate benchmarks that are much more consistent with the local issues and with the local cost of capital than international benchmarks will ever be for countries in unstable macroeconomic situations. Cost cutting will require an equally strong commitment to imposing regulatory accounting systems that reduce the information asymmetrics that incumbents use to reduce the risks of entry. All these changes will ultimately require a stronger commitment by competition agencies, since in many countries a failure to negotiate interconnection agreements will raise competition issues just as often as it will raise regulatory questions.


Digital
Government Transfers and Political Support
Authors: --- ---
Year: 2009 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass National Bureau of Economic Research

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We estimate the impact of a large anti-poverty program -- the Uruguayan PANES -- on political support for the government that implemented it. The program mainly consisted of a monthly cash transfer for a period of roughly two and half years. Using the discontinuity in program assignment based on a pre-treatment score, we find that beneficiary households are 21 to 28 percentage points more likely to favor the current government (relative to the previous government). Impacts on political support are larger among poorer households and for those near the center of the political spectrum, consistent with the probabilistic voting model in political economy. Effects persist after the cash transfer program ends. We estimate that the annual cost of increasing government political support by 1 percentage point is roughly 0.9% of annual government social expenditures.


Digital
Telecommunications performance, reforms and governance
Authors: --- ---
Year: 2006 Publisher: Washington, D.C; World Bank

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