Suchergebnisse
Filter
13 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
Rules of the International Trade, Investment, and Financial Systems: What they Deliver, how they Differ, the way Forward
In: Journal of international economic law, Band 17, Heft 4, S. 833-845
ISSN: 1464-3758
The Definition of Subsidy and State Aid. By LUCA RUBINI
In: Journal of international economic law, Band 13, Heft 4, S. 1145-1147
ISSN: 1464-3758
INTERNATIONAL IMPLICATIONS OF THE ALIEN TORT STATUTE
In: Journal of international economic law, Band 7, Heft 2, S. 245-262
ISSN: 1464-3758
International Economic Law in Times that are Stressful
In: Journal of international economic law, Band 5, Heft 1, S. 3-16
ISSN: 1464-3758
Consumer Goods Or Capital Goods—Supply Consistency In Development Planning (Notes and Comments)
In: The Pakistan development review: PDR, Band 8, Heft 1, S. 104-110
Everyone who has heard of Harrod-Domar realises that growth
targets imply something about savings rates. But growth targets also
imply something about the availability of capital goods. The business of
economic planning, as Winston points out [1], is to ensure compatibility
between the Harrod-Domar and the Mahalanobis constraints. If domestic
savings exceed the availability of domestic plus foreign capital goods,
two "despised alternatives" confront the economy: inventory accumulation
or slower growth. To avoid this unhappy predicament, Winston outlines
three remedial policies. Our purpose is to suggest that the Harrod-Domar
and Mahalanobis constraints may not be independent. Remedial policies
aimed at that larger capital goods supply may affect the private and
public savings rates and the growth of income. These suggestions are
hardly novel [2]. They turn on re¬placing the proportional savings
function with a classical savings function (i.e., one which specifies
private savings rates by economic sector), on distinguishing tax rates
by type of domestic production and imports, and on stipulating a
connection between consumer-goods production and import of raw materials
for the consumer industries.
Progressivity and horizontal equity in personal income taxation [erosion of progressive personal income taxation in the United States]
In: The southwestern social science quarterly, Band 47, S. 181-190
ISSN: 0276-1742
Progressivity and horizontal equity in personal income taxation [erosion of progressive personal income taxation in the United States]
In: The southwestern social science quarterly, Band 47, S. 181-190
ISSN: 0276-1742
On Balance-of-Payments Payback Periods
In: The journal of business, Band 45, Heft 3, S. 416
ISSN: 1537-5374
Taxing boycotts and bribes [effects of the Tax reform act of 1976 and the Export administration act amendments of 1977]
In: The Denver journal of international law and policy, Band 6, S. 589-611
ISSN: 0196-2035
Expropriation losses and tax policy [United States tax treatment of foreign corporate expropriation losses, focusing on direct investment rather than portfolio holdings]
In: Harvard international law journal, Band 16, S. 533-564
ISSN: 0017-8063
The Balance of Payments: Theory and Economic Policy
In: The Economic Journal, Band 84, Heft 334, S. 416
Cotton Textile and Leather Exports: What Cost Foreign Exchange? (Notes & Comments)
In: The Pakistan development review: PDR, Band 9, Heft 3, S. 330-342
The senior author has elsewhere argued [8] that foreign
exchange earned by the export of West Pakistan-manufactured goods has a
high domestic cost. Much the same contention has been advanced by Hecox
[7], Islam [9] and MacEwan [11]. In these papers the relationship
between costs and earnings is usually based on fairly abstract
assumptions. The purpose of this note is to reduce the calculations to a
"plain man" level. Specifically, we try to calculate how many rupees of
indigenous resources are expended to earn each extra rupee of foreign
exchange which is received from exporting cotton textiles and leather
goods rather than their primary ingredients, namely raw cotton and hides
and skins i. Since this note was written, the Board of Economic Inquiry,
Lahore, at the request of the West Pakistan Planning and Development
Department, has undertaken a wider study applying the same general
approach used here.