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This book is about the relationship between firm dynamics,
innovation and globalization, the processes that are essential for
long term economic growth and welfare creation. This volume deals
with these three issues in three sections titled respectively:
entrepreneurship, new firm formation and growth;
productivity-innovation-growthnexus; globalization, multinational
firms and producers' dynamics. The book presents new studies
written by distinguished researchers in the field, who use
state-of-the-art methodologies and extensive sources of firm- and
plant-level longitudinal data to analyze and understand these major
economic issues facing modern economies. In the first section, the
book proposes two comprehensive introductory surveys which explore
in detail the underpinnings of entrepreneurship, new firm formation
and growth in advanced and developing countries. The second
fundamental issue, productivity-innovation and firm dynamics, is
approached by examining key drivers of selection mechanisms such as
size, scale elasticity, innovative efforts, financial fragility of
the firms, barriers to entry and exit, capital and financial market
distortions, institutional inefficiencies and other market
imperfections which affect the ability of firms to expand or enter.
The third section examines differences, linkages and intertwined
evolution of foreign and domestic firms in their dynamics of
survival and growth in different institutional contexts and
periods. Each chapter includes a detailed discussion of the
implications of the respective analyses for enterprise policy. In a
concluding chapter the overall implications for enterprise policy
of the analyses presented in the different chapters are drawn by
the Editors. This approach ensures that the book is integrated
around a coherent central theme in comprehensive framework. The
book responds to a growing concern among scholars, professionals,
and policy makers over the recent decades about firm ability to
survive and compete in a context of increasing globalization and
international competition. The approach adopted is both theoretical
and empirical with consideration of paradigmatic case studies in
Europe, Africa and Asia, providing new evidence on developed,
developing and transition economies in a comparative perspective.
The cases selected represent different levels of development,
different firms strategies and paths, with distinct outcomes. The
book is an essential reading for scholars and students concerned
with industry development, public policy and globalization, as well
as to all those involved professionally in such issues.
This book presents an in-depth case study of thirteen individuals
who moved away from terrorist activity in Turkey. Setting their
life stories in the context of political violence in support of
Kurdish independence and a leftist revolution, and the response of
the Turkish state, the book examines how the individuals were
motivated to become involved in terrorism, how they participated,
why they became disillusioned, and above all how they coped with
the difficult process of disengagement. The book then draws out
general lessons on how individuals can be encouraged to move away
from terrorism, and especially on how states can construct
repentance mechanisms, and protection mechanisms, to assist with
this. The book is a particularly rich valuable source on why people
move away from terrorism as most books in the field concentrate on
why people become terrorists, and on "terrorist profiling".
This book presents an in-depth case study of thirteen individuals
who moved away from terrorist activity in Turkey. Setting their
life stories in the context of political violence in support of
Kurdish independence and a leftist revolution, and the response of
the Turkish state, the book examines how the individuals were
motivated to become involved in terrorism, how they participated,
why they became disillusioned, and above all how they coped with
the difficult process of disengagement. The book then draws out
general lessons on how individuals can be encouraged to move away
from terrorism, and especially on how states can construct
repentance mechanisms, and protection mechanisms, to assist with
this. The book is a particularly rich valuable source on why people
move away from terrorism as most books in the field concentrate on
why people become terrorists, and on "terrorist profiling".
This book is about the relationship between firm dynamics,
innovation and globalization, the processes that are essential for
long term economic growth and welfare creation. This volume deals
with these three issues in three sections titled respectively:
entrepreneurship, new firm formation and growth;
productivity-innovation-growthnexus; globalization, multinational
firms and producers' dynamics. The book presents new studies
written by distinguished researchers in the field, who use
state-of-the-art methodologies and extensive sources of firm- and
plant-level longitudinal data to analyze and understand these major
economic issues facing modern economies. In the first section, the
book proposes two comprehensive introductory surveys which explore
in detail the underpinnings of entrepreneurship, new firm formation
and growth in advanced and developing countries. The second
fundamental issue, productivity-innovation and firm dynamics, is
approached by examining key drivers of selection mechanisms such as
size, scale elasticity, innovative efforts, financial fragility of
the firms, barriers to entry and exit, capital and financial market
distortions, institutional inefficiencies and other market
imperfections which affect the ability of firms to expand or enter.
The third section examines differences, linkages and intertwined
evolution of foreign and domestic firms in their dynamics of
survival and growth in different institutional contexts and
periods. Each chapter includes a detailed discussion of the
implications of the respective analyses for enterprise policy. In a
concluding chapter the overall implications for enterprise policy
of the analyses presented in the different chapters are drawn by
the Editors. This approach ensures that the book is integrated
around a coherent central theme in comprehensive framework. The
book responds to a growing concern among scholars, professionals,
and policy makers over the recent decades about firm ability to
survive and compete in a context of increasing globalization and
international competition. The approach adopted is both theoretical
and empirical with consideration of paradigmatic case studies in
Europe, Africa and Asia, providing new evidence on developed,
developing and transition economies in a comparative perspective.
The cases selected represent different levels of development,
different firms strategies and paths, with distinct outcomes. The
book is an essential reading for scholars and students concerned
with industry development, public policy and globalization, as well
as to all those involved professionally in such issues.
Connections among different assets, asset classes, portfolios, and
the stocks of individual institutions are critical in examining
financial markets. Interest in financial markets implies interest
in underlying macroeconomic fundamentals. In Financial and
Macroeconomic Connectedness, Frank Diebold and Kamil Yilmaz propose
a simple framework for defining, measuring, and monitoring
connectedness, which is central to finance and macroeconomics.
These measures of connectedness are theoretically rigorous yet
empirically relevant. The approach to connectedness proposed by the
authors is intimately related to the familiar econometric notion of
variance decomposition. The full set of variance decompositions
from vector auto-regressions produces the core of the
'connectedness table.' The connectedness table makes clear how one
can begin with the most disaggregated pair-wise directional
connectedness measures and aggregate them in various ways to obtain
total connectedness measures. The authors also show that variance
decompositions define weighted, directed networks, so that these
proposed connectedness measures are intimately related to key
measures of connectedness used in the network literature. After
describing their methods in the first part of the book, the authors
proceed to characterize daily return and volatility connectedness
across major asset (stock, bond, foreign exchange and commodity)
markets as well as the financial institutions within the U.S. and
across countries since late 1990s. These specific measures of
volatility connectedness show that stock markets played a critical
role in spreading the volatility shocks from the U.S. to other
countries. Furthermore, while the return connectedness across stock
markets increased gradually over time the volatility connectedness
measures were subject to significant jumps during major crisis
events. This book examines not only financial connectedness, but
also real fundamental connectedness. In particular, the authors
show that global business cycle connectedness is economically
significant and time-varying, that the U.S. has disproportionately
high connectedness to others, and that pairwise country
connectedness is inversely related to bilateral trade surpluses.
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