MegaCatálogo Bibliográfico
Centro de Documentación. FCEyS. UNMdP

- Recursos bibliográficos en papel y digitales -
- libros, artículos de revistas, ponencias de eventos, etc. -

» Resultado: 2 registros

Registro 1 de 2
Autor: Becchetti, Leonardo - Castriota, Stefano - Conzo, Pierluigi
Título: Social capital dynamics and collective action: the role of subjective satisfaction in a common pool resource experiment
Fuente: Environment and Development Economics. v.21, n.4. Beijer Institute of Ecological Economics; Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Páginas: pp. 512-531
Año: Aug. 2016
Resumen: In low-income countries, grassroots collective action for the management of a common environmental resource is a well-known substitute for government provision of public goods. In our research we test experimentally what its effect is on social capital. To this purpose we structure a ’sandwich’ experiment in which participants play a common pool resource game (CPRG) between two trust games in a Nairobi slum where social capital is scarce but informal rules regulating the commons are abundant. Our findings show that the change in trustworthiness between the two trust game rounds generated by the CPRG experience is crucially affected by the subjective satisfaction about the CPRG, rather than by standard objective measures related to CPRG players’ behaviour. These results highlight that subjective satisfaction in a collective action has relevant predictive power on social capital creation, providing information which can be crucial to designing successful self-organized environmental resource regimes.
Solicitar por: HEMEROTECA E + datos de Fuente
Registro 2 de 2
Autor: Becchetti, Leonardo - 
Título: Finance, Investment and Innovation: A Theoretical and Empirical Comparative Analysis
Fuente: Empirica. v.22, n.3
Páginas: pp. 167-84
Año: 1995
Resumen: The paper compares the relative efficiency of "country models" in the relationship between finance and investments. Results, confirmed under three different panel data estimates ("Arellano-Bond" GMM method, random and fixed effect estimates) suggest that: i) the UK "thick market" reduces informational asymmetries for large firms and for those firms providing good signals to shareholders; ii) the Japanese "vertical (between firms and banks) integration" and horizontal (among firms) integration" almost eliminates financial constraints (the horizontal integration effect) and equates agency costs across firms (the vertical integration effect). These results are consistent with the "short-termist" hypothesis which assumes that the Japanese economic system can process information more efficiently reducing managerial myopic behaviour and thereby determining positive effects on long term growth.
Solicitar por: HEMEROTECA E + datos de Fuente

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