83 research outputs found

    Ruth Wong: Educationist & Teacher Extraordinaire (11 Sep 2013)

    No full text
    Group photo of the author Dr. Wong Hee Ong with student leaders who attended the book launch. Front row (from left): Lee Xu En Sean, Lynn Tay Ern Hwee, Clarissa Cheong, Tan Wenxin (Katherine), Dr Wong Hee Ong, Low Si Hui, Kong Yanli Karen, Ee Yuan Qi Eugenia, Amanda Huang Xuanqi, Foo Shi Ping Melissa, Elyana Insyirah Binte Esman. Back row (from left): Jeremy Lim Ching Sen, Amos Kow Yuan Hong, Liang Chay Jiang (Marcus), Ng Jia Jun Justin, Perdana Putra, Fahmi Bin Sahar, Sreetharan s/o Rajaselvan, Lee Sixian, Goh Eng Jue

    Functional MRI in SLE—the current state

    No full text

    Takotsubo syndrome and rheumatic diseases - a critical systematic review

    No full text
    10.1093/rheumatology/keaa504RHEUMATOLOGY60111-2

    Untitled Reply

    No full text
    10.1002/art.41151ARTHRITIS & RHEUMATOLOGY723509-51

    Income Distribution and Poverty in a CGE Framework: A Proposed Methodology

    No full text
    The paper discusses methodologies addressing income distribution and poverty in a Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) model framework, by describing how to link CGE results with household survey data to analyze income distribution and poverty implications. The most basic approach is simply to fit the household income/expenditure to the survey data by suitable parametric distribution functions. The post-simulation poverty indices can be estimated by either assuming that the income of each individual household within the group moves proportionally with the group's mean income, or by our proposed elasticity method. In our proposed method, we use the elasticity estimated from existing surveys to calculate the change in expenditure of each subgroup category in response to change in the household category's mean consumption, supplied by the core model's simulation, to derive post-simulation poverty indices. Our approach may better capture intra-group income distribution of households and moderate gains or losses in welfare from economic growths.Computable General Equilibrium, Income Distribution, Poverty.
    corecore