Category
Date
Title
Presenter/Location
Details
2008/07/03 Thu
16:30〜18:00
16:30〜18:00
Carpooling and congestion pricing: HOV and HOT lanes(with Se-il Mun)
小西秀男(Boston College)
京都大学法経総合研究棟1階 105演習室
【応用ミクロ経済学・産業経済学ワークショップと共催】
2008/06/28 Sat
14:00〜17:00
14:00〜17:00
Changes of Corporate Governance and Labour Systems in Transition: A Comparison of Russia and Japan、The Misuse of Institutions: A Political Economy Perspective
Satoshi Mizobata 氏(京都大学)、Leonid Polishchuk 氏(IRIS, The University of Maryland)
経済研究所 第一共同研究室
2008/06/20 Fri
16:30〜18:00
16:30〜18:00
Heterogeneous quality firms and trade costs
大久保敏弘(神戸大学)
京都大学経済研究所本館1階 第二共同研究室
要旨:There is increasing empirical evidence that vertical product differentiation is an important determinant of international trade. However, the economic literature so far has solely focused on the case in which quality trade stems from differences between countries. No studies investigate the role of quality trade between similar economies. This paper first develops a simple theoretical trade model that includes vertical product differentiation in a heterogeneous-firm framework. The model yields three main predictions for trade between similar economies. First, exported goods are of higher quality than goods sold on the domestic market. Second, larger economies have on average higher export qualities compared with smaller economies. Third, with increasing trade costs higher quality goods are exchanged. For all three effects, strong empirical support is found using detailed export trade data of the United States and 15 European Union countries.
2008/06/20 Fri
15:00〜16:30
15:00〜16:30
Congestion externalities and new economic geography
藤嶋翔太(東京大学・院)
京都大学経済研究所本館1階 第二共同研究室
要旨:This paper aims to address the effects of congestion externalities in a new economic geography context. Our model is the same as the standard CP model except for the assumption that per-unit interregional transport cost depends on total volume of shipped varieties. As a result of the endogeneity of per-unit transport cost, we have some features of agglomeration and dispersion equilibria that are not evident from the standard models. A welfare analysis focuses on a second best problem so that a market still can take a part in generating agglomeration economies. That is, we investigate the relationship between the congestion externalities and the second best unit tax of shipped goods given firm's monopolistic pricing. If skilled workers are nearly agglomerated in one region, the interregional congestion externalities should not be fully internalized regardless of the level of transport technology. In an evenly dispersed economy, however, the second best tax can be larger than the congestion externalities if the level of transport technology is low.
2008/06/11 Wed
16:30〜18:00
16:30〜18:00
A Factor-proportions theory of endogenous firm heterogeneity
佐藤 仁志 氏(アジア経済研究所)
経済研究所 会議室
2008/06/06 Fri
17:00〜18:30
17:00〜18:30
Cultural Assimilation, Cultural Diffusion and the Origin of the Wealth of Nations
Oded Galor氏 (ブラウン大学)
経済研究所 第三共同研究室
2008/06/04 Wed
16:00〜17:30
16:00〜17:30
Time Series Nonparametric Regression Using Asymmetric Kernels with an Application to Estimation of Scalar Diffusion Processes
蛭川 雅之(Northtern Illinois大学)
第一共同研究室(4F北側)
2008/05/23 Fri
16:30〜18:00
16:30〜18:00
Characterization and explanation of the destination choice patterns of newly arrived immigrants in the United States
Kao Lee Liaw(McMaster University)
京都大学経済研究所本館1階 第二共同研究室
2008/05/23 Fri
16:30〜18:00
16:30〜18:00
Oracle- Efficient Nonparametric Estimation of an Additive Model with an Unknown Link Function
Joel Horowitz(Northwestern University)
第1共同研究室(4階)
2008/05/23 Fri
15:00〜16:30
15:00〜16:30
Strategic technology transfer through FDI in vertically related markets
石川城太(一橋大学)
京都大学経済研究所本館1階 第二共同研究室
要旨:Using a simple North-South trade model with vertically related markets, we show that a North downstream firm may have an incentive to strategically utilize technology spillovers to a local rival caused by foreign direct investment (FDI). Whether the North firm invests in the South depends on the South firm's capacity to absorb the North technology. FDI arises only if the capacity is medium. Technology spillovers through FDI may benefit all producers and consumers. Our analysis also suggests that very tight intellectual property rights protection in the South may benefit neither the North nor the South, because it "discourages" FDI.