5,275 research outputs found

    Dick Price photograph, Gerald Jones' Chairoplanes, 1984.

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    Gerald Jones' Chairoplanes - CP53 - photographed 2 June 1984

    Gerald Lloyd Oral History Interview

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    Gerald Lloyd, a lifelong resident of Price, Utah, discusses his upbringing, career in the coal mines, and experiences raising his children in the area. He highlights the advantages of growing up in a smaller community, such as opportunities in high school and easier access to local amenities, but also reflects on the significant economic shifts due to the decline of the coal industry and the challenges of limited job opportunities for younger generations, leading to a "brain drain." Lloyd shares his perspective on local politics, the changing demographics, and expresses a strong desire for new industries and thoughtful government investment to secure Price\u27s future, while acknowledging the enduring strong sense of community

    Gerald Gorman

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    Phorograph - Gerald Gorman in traditional Scottish clothing, (Edinburgh, Scotland). A note with the picture reads: "Hoot Mon", The Canadian Kid. Sincerely Yours, Gerald Gorma

    Intercommodity price transmittal : analysis offood markets in Ghana

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    This report expands on a dynamic model of market integration to investigate how information is transmitted across commodities. The author investigates one property of an efficient market : the full use of available information. Studies of spatial price integration simultaneously looks at the flow of information and commodities. The author investigates the flow of information within a single spatial market and the relationship between prices in spatially separate markets. He studies intercommodity price transmittal from two perspectives. First, he asks whether the government can concentrate on a single commodity price, yet achieve policy objectives in a broader arena. This is important in Ghana because no single commodity dominates consumers'food budgets. The author finds that price movements for the main cereal consumed in the country (maize) are fully transmitted to other regions. Second, he investigates the working of commodity markets in developing countries. He notes imperfections in the way markets process information. There are several possible explanations for this market inefficiency. Traders may set prices for other coarse grains in response to information about maize prices. Another possibility is that some traders may not deal in all grains and thus have different costs of acquiring information. In short the author's dynamic model of price integration indicates functional efficiency in Ghana.Access to Markets,Markets and Market Access,Environmental Economics&Policies,Economic Theory&Research,Agricultural Research

    Gerald Nelson discusses article "Do roads cause deforestation?"

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    IFPRI Senior Researcher, Gerald Nelson, discusses the article, "Do roads cause deforestation." On July 25, 2011, Nelson and co-author, Daniel Hellerstein, were honored by the AAEA with the Publication of Enduring Quality Award for this innovative 1997 publication on techniques for turning satellite imagery into economic data

    Portrait of President Gerald Ford.

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    Handwritten Inscription: \u27To Felton M. Johnston - best always, Gerald Ford\u27https://egrove.olemiss.edu/fmjohnston/1097/thumbnail.jp

    The Price of Alcohol, Wife Abuse, and Husband Abuse

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    Alcohol consumption has been frequently linked to family violence. The purpose of this paper is to examine the direct relationship between the price of alcohol, which determines consumption, and violence towards spouses. The data come from the 1985 cross section and the 1985-1987 panel of the National Family Violence Survey. The 1985 data are a nationally representative sample while the panel oversamples violent individuals. Dichotomous indicators of severe violence towards wives and husbands are used. A reduced for violence equation is estimated, and individual-level fixed effects are used to control for unobserved characteristics in the panel. A consistent result that emerges from this paper is that an increase in the pure price of alcohol, as measured by a weighted average of the price of alcohol from beer, wine, and liquor, will serve to reduce severe violence aimed at wives. By contrast, the evidence on the propensity of an increase in the price of alcohol to lower violence towards husbands is mixed. When individual level characteristics are not controlled for, the price is not a predictor of violence towards men. However, once the individual traits are controlled for, a negative relationship between the price and violence emerges.

    Strategic advertising and pricing with sequential Buyer search

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    Advertising;Price Theory

    FEEDER CATTLE PRICE DIFFERENTIALS IN GEORGIA TELEAUCTIONS

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    Three Georgia feeder cattle teleauction markets were analyzed from 1977 to 1988 to estimate the impacts of cattle characteristics and market conditions on prices. Cattle characteristic price impacts were similar to those in previous studies. The impact of feeder cattle futures price on teleauction price was positive but varied across markets. Optimal lot size ranged from 143 to 276 head. In one market, 14 lots were necessary to generate positive price impacts. Additional buyers were estimated to have a $.30/cwt per buyer impact on price.Demand and Price Analysis,
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