Human and social capital of Chinese students in Germany
In: Asian students in Germany. Contexts of their studies, living conditions and future plans., S. 62-90
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In: Asian students in Germany. Contexts of their studies, living conditions and future plans., S. 62-90
In: Asian students in Germany. Contexts of their studies, living conditions and future plans., S. 176-220
Drama-related intangible cultural heritage is rich in connotations, and the development of tourism value of drama-related intangible cultural heritage can promote the service industry and boost the development of green economy. Using panel data of 31 provinces, municipalities directly under the central government and autonomous regions in China from 2000 to 2019, this paper empirically analyzed the global picture of the effectiveness of sustainable policies for drama-related intangible cultural heritage tourism through the double difference method of quasi-natural experiment, then analyzed the different performance of policies among regions with different geographical characteristics, and finally analyzed the patterns of four batches of policies in time sequentially in multiple periods. The results found that sustainable policies for drama-related intangible cultural heritage tourism can promote the development of green service industries. These policies can promote the service industry in areas with a relatively backward economy, a single industrial sector, and a low degree of openness, but with outstanding ethnic characteristics, and can effectively promote rural revitalization. Besides, these policies first promote the growth rate of the green service industry, and the effectiveness of the policies has a certain time lag. As the effect of the policies accumulates, the growth rate of the green service industry slows down, the scale benefits appear, and the proportion of the industry is obviously increased.
BASE
ABSTRACT: The world financial cataclysms bring tremendous monetary flaws in the financial framework for the entire world. In many countries, the situation in the financial division turned out to be severe to the point that the legislature was forced to begin to expand the bundle to maintain the financial segment. In this study, a PANEL approach was use to assess the impact of bank specific regulation (BSR) on financial performance (FP) of bank in Ghana for the period of 10 years. In this examination, the association is divided between financial performance (FP) and BSR (the interest rate (IR), foreign exchange rate (FER) and credit risk (CR)) between banks in Ghana. To begin with, the direction of stationary factor was affirmed. A panel test by Pedroni and Kao is used to achieve the long-term relationship between the factors in the model, in which FP is endogenous variable and BSR is exogenous. Also, the test of causation was built by (Granger, 1969) to direct whether a causal relationship exists among the factors. The examination showed long-term relationship depending by the Granger causal relationship which shows a bi-directional, Uni-directional connection in the middle of a factor. KEYWORDS: bank-specific regulations, credit risk, foreign exchange rate, interest rate
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SSRN
In: Materials and design, Band 88, S. 598-609
ISSN: 1873-4197
In: International Labor Migration 13
In: Fudan Journal of the humanities & social sciences, Band 16, Heft 4, S. 569-589
ISSN: 2198-2600
In: Asia Pacific business review, S. 1-31
ISSN: 1743-792X
In: Children and youth services review: an international multidisciplinary review of the welfare of young people, Band 131, S. 106279
ISSN: 0190-7409
In: POLYH-D-20-00608
SSRN
Working paper
SSRN
Working paper
In: Children and youth services review: an international multidisciplinary review of the welfare of young people, Band 121, S. 105845
ISSN: 0190-7409
In: Political studies: the journal of the Political Studies Association of the United Kingdom, Band 67, Heft 3, S. 752-774
ISSN: 1467-9248
This article explains the regional variation in the electoral rules governing village election in China. We argue that China's fast urbanization and land development have undermined the quality of rural democracy because local government officials faced pressure to ensure "right" cadres elected, and therefore had motivation to manipulate election rules. A panel dataset covering two rounds of elections in 2005 and 2008 is utilized to test the hypothesized relationship. Our findings are robust to various refinements in measurement and model specification. These findings contribute to the general literature on land and democratization as well as the recent debate about competitive elections in authoritarian countries.
In: IEEE transactions on engineering management: EM ; a publication of the IEEE Engineering Management Society, Band 65, Heft 1, S. 113-127