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The middle-income trap refers to an economic situation at which a country gets stuck when it achieves the middle-income status. According to Rigg et al. (2014), there are 28 countries which by 1987 had attained middle-income status but in 2012 still remained in this middle-income category. In...
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Drawing on household data collected in Germany between 1997 and 2012, this article investigates the heterogeneity in the direct rebound effect of individual mobility using discrete-continuous models, a common technique for addressing selectivity biases in data sets with endogenously partitioned...
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Upper-middle-income economies (UMIE) are experiencing an economic slowdown, partly due to weak regulatory performance. This issue leads to slow growth in private sector participation, thus limiting the ability to achieve higher economic growth. At this critical point, the government's role is to...
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Empirical studies on the relationship between income and happiness commonly use standard ordered response models, the most well-known representatives being the ordered logit and the ordered probit. However, these models restrict the marginal probability effects by design, and therefore limit the...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005703632
The goal of this paper is to analyze a new phenomenon: Internet demand in Spain. To do so, we use a new high quality data set and advanced econometric techniques for estimating Internet demand functions, incorporating the socio-demographic characteristics of the individuals. We begin with a...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10008468185