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Parties often regulate their relationships through “continuing” contracts that are neither long-term nor short-term but usually roll over. We study the trade-off between long-term, short-term, and continuing contracts in a two period model where gains from trade exist in the first period,...
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Parties often regulate their relationships through “continuing” contracts that are neither long‐term nor short‐term but usually roll over: a leading example is a standard employment contract. We argue that what distinguishes a continuing contract from a short‐term (or fixed‐term)...
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The author analyzes the allocation of foreign aid to various sectors in a recipient developing country. Donors tend to favor social sectors over other public expenditure programs. Due to incomplete information, donors may concentrate too much on priority sectors, leaving lower-priority yet...
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Parties often regulate their relationships through "continuing" contracts that are neither long-term nor short-term but usually roll over. We study the trade-off between long-term, short-term, and continuing contracts in a two period model where gains from trade exist in the first period, and...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012457663