MegaCatálogo Bibliográfico
Centro de Documentación. FCEyS. UNMdP

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

» Resultado: 3 registros

Registro 1 de 3
Autor: Jovanovic, Boyan - 
Título: Firm Formation with Heterogeneous Management and Labor Skills
Fuente: Small Business Economics. v.6, n.3. Kluwer Academic Publishers
Páginas: pp. 185-91
Año: June 1994
Resumen: When both management skills and labor skills differ in the population, the nature of firm formation can differ radically from the equilibrium we are used to dealing with: The best potential managers could end up as wage workers. This happens when managerial skills are positively correlated with working skills, and there is some empirical evidence that this is indeed the case.
Solicitar por: HEMEROTECA S + datos de Fuente
Registro 2 de 3
Autor: Benhabib, Jess - Jovanovic, Boyan - 
Título: Externalities and Growth Accounting
Fuente: American Economic Review. v.81, n.1. American Economic Association
Páginas: pp. 82-113
Año: Mar. 1991
Resumen: This paper tackles two puzzles: the high empirical elasticity of aggregte output with respect to the measured capital input and the seemingly high variability of growth rates over countries in the medium run. We find that one need not invoke increasing returns or externalities to capital to explain these two puzzles. Rather, they are consistent with a constant-returns-to-scale aggregate production function, so long as the exogenous Solow residual process has enough persistence in it. In our model, causality runs exclusively from knowledge to capital, and therefore the apparent absence of an external effect to the capital input says nothing about the importance of spillovers in the creation of knowledge.
Solicitar por: HEMEROTECA A + datos de Fuente
Registro 3 de 3
Autor: Jovanovic, Boyan - Lach, Saul - 
Título: Entry, Exit, and Diffusion with Learning by Doing
Fuente: American Economic Review. v.79, n.4. American Economic Association
Páginas: pp. 690-99
Año: Sept. 1989
Resumen: Early entry has the advantage of higher revenues per unit of output early on. Late entry has the benefit of learning from the experience of earlier entrants, and hence lower production costs. The advantages are balanced off in a continuous-time, perfect-foresight equilibrium. Competition generates S-shaped diffusion, and staggered entry and exit. A monopolist will innovate less than a competitive industry, but the innovation that he does do, he will do sooner.
Solicitar por: HEMEROTECA A + datos de Fuente

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