カテゴリ
日時
タイトル
報告者/場所
詳細
2010/01/13 (水)
16:00〜17:30
16:00〜17:30
Information Criteria for Moment Restriction Models
末石 直也(University of Wisconsin Maddison)
第一共同研究室(4F北側)
2009/12/18 (金)
16:30〜18:00
16:30〜18:00
The spatial structure of production/distribution networks and its implication for technology transfers and spillovers
木村福成(慶應義塾大学)
京都大学経済研究所本館1階 第二共同研究室
要旨:This paper argues that a variety of firm specificity supported by sophisticated inter-firm relationships is essential for understanding the mechanics and spatial structure of international production/distribution networks in East Asia. By mapping the two-dimensional fragmentation framework (Kimura and Ando (2005)) into geographical space, the paper proposes the concept of four layers of transactions in production/distribution networks: (i) local, (ii) sub-regional, (iii) regional, and (iv) the world. The concept effectively bridges geographical extensions of production/ distribution networks and the nature of transactions in terms of intra-firm vs. arm's-length as well as technological/managerial conditions. In addition, the paper discusses the implications of such geographical structure of production/distribution networks for technology transfers/spillovers from multinationals to local firms and claims its importance in new development strategies.
2009/12/01 (火)
17:00〜18:30
17:00〜18:30
Social Security, Benefit Claiming and Labor Force Participation: A Quantitative General Equilibrium Approach
Selahattin Imrohoroglu 氏(University of Southern California)
経済研究所 会議室
2009/11/18 (水)
16:30〜18:00
16:30〜18:00
Competitive Pressure and the Adoption of Complementary Innovations
Eugenio J. Miravete 氏(Texas Austin 大学)
経済研究所 会議室
2009/11/13 (金)
16:30〜18:00
16:30〜18:00
Doing well by doing good? Green office buildings
John Quigley(University of California at Berkeley)
京都大学経済研究所本館1階 第二共同研究室
要旨:This paper provides the first credible evidence on the economic value of "green buildings" - derived from impersonal market transactions rather than engineering estimates. We analyze clusters of certified green and nearby buildings, establishing that "rated" buildings command substantially higher rents and selling prices than otherwise identical buildings. Variations in premiums are systematically related to energy-saving characteristics. Increased energy efficiency is associated with increased selling prices - beyond the premiums paid for a labeled building. Evidence suggests that the intangible effects of the label itself may also play a role in determining the values of green buildings in the marketplace.