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ECONOMIC ANALYSIS (31) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   125832


Analysis of Japan's energy and environment strategy after the F / Homma, Takashi; Akimoto, Keigo   Journal Article
Akimoto, Keigo Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This paper examines economic analyses of the "Options for Energy and the Environment" proposed by the Japanese government. The main focuses of the analyses are the power generation mix in 2030, and particularly electricity supply shares of nuclear power. The options proposed by the government assume drastic energy efficiency improvements, increase in renewable energy, and deep CO2 emission reductions. Considerable energy savings are assumed by the government even in the baseline scenario, and these are inconsistent with historical growth trends for GDP and power demand. We modify the energy savings baseline scenario for consistency with the historical trends and historical electricity savings after the nuclear power accident. In order to provide a wider array of options, particularly those with fewer negative impacts on GDP, this paper proposes alternative options under a revised baseline. In the alternative options, we assume lower shares of renewable energy in electricity supply and lower carbon price. The economic impacts for the alternative options are much smaller than those assumed by the government. The economic analyses provided in this paper will help future policy making for energy and environment in Japan.
Key Words Climate Change  Economic analysis  Energy Mix 
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2
ID:   128035


Assessment of household electricity load curves and correspondi / Garg, Amit; Shukla, P.R; Maheshwari, Jyoti; Upadhyay, Jigeesha   Journal Article
Garg, Amit Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Gujarat, a large industrialized state in India, consumed 67 TWh of electricity in 2009-10, besides experiencing a 4.5% demand-supply short-fall. Residential sector accounted for 15% of the total electricity consumption. We conducted load research survey across 21 cities and towns of the state to estimate residential electricity load curves, share of appliances by type and usage patterns for all types of household appliances at utility, geographic, appliance, income and end-use levels. The results indicate that a large scope exists for penetration of energy efficient devices in residential sector. Marginal Abatement Cost (MAC) curves for electricity and CO2 were generated to analyze relative attractiveness of energy efficient appliance options. Results indicate that up to 7.9 TWh of electricity can be saved per year with 6.7 Mt-CO2 emissions mitigation at negative or very low CO2 prices of US$ 10/t-CO2. Despite such options existing, their penetration is not realized due to myriad barriers such as financial, institutional or awareness and therefore cannot be taken as baseline options for CO2 emission mitigation regimes.
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3
ID:   105612


Basis for preventive defense: institutionalizing economic analysis in the US military / Schramm, Carl J   Journal Article
Schramm, Carl J Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
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4
ID:   044053


Budget concepts for economic analysis / Lewis, Wilrred (ed) 1968  Book
Lewis, Wilrred Book
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Publication Washington, Brookings Institution, 1968.
Description 198p.
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012360336/LEW 012360MainOn ShelfGeneral 
5
ID:   128269


China's "new regionalism": subnational analysis in Chinese political economy / Rithmire, Meg E   Journal Article
Rithmire, Meg E Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract The study of Chinese political economy has experienced a sea change since the late 1990s; instead of debating the origins and direction of national reform, scholars have turned to examining the origins of local economic variation. This article reviews recent work in the regional political economy of contemporary China. In keeping with a movement in comparative politics toward analyzing subnational politics, the "new regionalists" seek to identify and explain meaningful heterogeneity in the Chinese polity and economy. Yet they go further than simply using subnational cases to generate or test theories about Chinese politics. Instead, they propose that subnational political economies in China are a function of endogenous change rather than a reaction to national priorities. After identifying differences between the "new regionalism" and previous studies of decentralization in China, the author discusses this work according to the theoretical approaches (institutional, ideational, and sociohistorical) used to explain the origins of regional differences. She concludes by examining the limitations of the new regionalist agenda in comparative and historical context and suggesting that scholars move past unconditional acceptance of the causal power of "socialist legacies" and instead attend to the importance of changes in the post-Mao administrative hierarchy.
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6
ID:   133975


Consent in investor-state arbitration: a critical analysis / Wang, Guiguo   Journal Article
Wang, Guiguo Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Consent is a precondition of arbitration, regardless of whether it is between private parties to commercial transactions or a foreign investor and its host State. Consent determines the formation and competence of arbitration tribunals. It is therefore a foundation of the investor-State arbitration system. By its very nature, privity is not required in investor-State arbitration, albeit consent is essential to prove that the tribunal in question is bestowed the power to arbitrate. In addition, consent to arbitration may be given by the host State and the foreign investor at different times. It is often the case that the host State will give consent first, which is regarded as a standing offer. The acceptance of this offer by the investor, and thus its own consent, may be accomplished by its filing of a request for arbitration or by direct notification to the respondent State. Due to the variety of treaties coupled with contracts between foreign investors and host States, whether or not a host State has given consent to arbitration and the scope of the consent is often at issue. As far as the form of consent is concerned, most arbitration rules do not stipulate what may constitute a valid consent. For instance, the Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of Other States ('ICSID Convention') requires consent to arbitration to be in writing. It does not, however, further provide the requirements of writing. In such circumstances, disputing parties have the freedom to choose the manner of expressing their consent. In the circumstances, investment arbitration tribunals are left with much discretion in determining whether consent has been given and its validity as well as its scope. Because of this situation, the decisions of investment arbitration tribunals sometimes trigger criticisms. This article is going to examine the most relevant cases for the purpose of ascertaining the current status of investment law in operation.
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7
ID:   138227


Does the use of space solar power for in-space activities really make sense: an updated economic assessment / Straub, Jeremy   Article
Straub, Jeremy Article
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Summary/Abstract Advocates of space solar power propose its use as a mechanism for solving terrestrial and orbital power problems. These craft collect solar radiation via their solar panels and transmit it in a more concentrated form to receiving spacecraft or ground stations. This more concentrated transmission (e.g., via laser or microwave radiation) alters the power generation equation for the receiving craft or station, as it allows smaller (both in terms of mass and volume) receiving hardware to be utilized. It also offers other prospective benefits, such as the possibility of receiving power in eclipse and the reduced deterioration rate of radio antennas, as compared to solar cells (removing the need to include extra generation capability to offset lifetime deterioration). This paper seeks to answer the question of whether the use of SSP to power other in-space craft is justified, from an economic perspective. It considers factors that can be assessed both quantitatively and qualitatively.
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8
ID:   126548


Domestic institutions and the taxing of multinational corporati / Jensen, Nathan M   Journal Article
Jensen, Nathan M Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Political scientists have examined how domestic politics and the competition for international capital affect the setting of national tax rates. In this paper, I explore how political institutions, specifically the level of democracy, affect firm-level taxation across the world. I argue that electoral competition leads democratic governments to higher levels of taxation of firms. Using a data set on firm tax payments on the foreign affiliates of US multinational corporations from the US Bureau of Economic Analysis, I show that there are large variations within countries on the tax burdens faced by firms that are not explained by national tax rates. I find evidence that the mobility of the specific investment project, the types of spillovers these investments provide to a community, and attributes of the parent firm are all important determinants of taxation. While firm-level factors clearly affect corporate taxation, I argue that democratic institutions limit the offering of tax incentives and generate electoral benefits to policing tax avoidance by multinational corporations. After controlling for parent firm and foreign affiliate-level factors, I find that democratic countries generate as much as 26% more tax revenues from multinational corporations relative to authoritarian countries.
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9
ID:   097213


Economic analysis of different supporting policies for the prod / Dusonchet, Luigi; Telaretti, Enrico   Journal Article
Dusonchet, Luigi Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract Today, photovoltaic (PV) attracts considerable interest in relation to renewable energy technologies, because of its potential to contribute significantly to the future of renewable energy. However, PV market development is related strongly to the support policies introduced by national governments, defined in national laws. The modification or fading out of such incentive schemes can strongly influence the development of the PV market in any given country. In this paper, after a brief review of national support policies in PV technology in eastern European Union (EU) countries, the authors perform an economic analysis of the main support mechanisms that are implemented in these countries. The comparative analysis is based on the calculation of the cash flow, the Net Present Value (NPV) and the Internal Rate of Return (IRR) indices. The analysis shows that in some situations, support policies can be inconvenient for the owner of the PV system and that, in many cases, the differences between the implementation of the same support policy in different countries, can give rise to significantly different results.
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10
ID:   087463


Economic analysis of drug transaction cycles described by incar / Caulkins, Jonathan P; Gurga, Benjamin; Little, Christopher   Journal Article
Caulkins, Jonathan P Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract The fundamental activity of most drug dealers is buying drugs from a supplier and selling them on, usually in smaller lot sizes to multiple customers at a lower market level. Data on such 'cycles' of purchase and resale are derived from interviews with 65 dealers incarcerated in UK prisons. A power function relationship between price and transaction size is confirmed. Analyses reveal great consistency in proportional price markups across drugs and time, high cycle frequencies (typically weekly or more often) and importers who vertically integrate into the highest level of domestic distribution, so that an important share of their net revenues effectively derives from domestic distribution inside the UK, as opposed to importation per se.
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11
ID:   132618


Economic analysis of second use electric vehicle batteries for / Heymans, Catherine; Walker, Sean B; Young, Steven B; Fowle, Michael   Journal Article
Heymans, Catherine Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract The reuse of Li-ion EV batteries for energy storage systems (ESS) in stationary settings is a promising technology to support improved management of demand and supply of electricity. In this paper, MatLAB simulation of a residential energy profile and regulated cost structure is used to analyze the feasibility of and cost savings from repurposing an EV battery unit for peak-shifting. in situ residential energy storage can contribute to the implementation of a smart grid by supporting the reduction of demand during typical peak use periods. Use of an ESS increases household energy use but potentially improves economic effectiveness and reduces greenhouse gas emissions. The research supports the use of financial incentives for Li-ion battery reuse in ESS, including lower energy rates and reduced auxiliary fees.
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12
ID:   026176


Economic analysis of the budget 1972-1973. / Pakistan Finance Division; Pakistan Finance Division 1972  Book
Pakistan Finance Division Book
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Publication Finance Division Pakistan Government., 1972.
Description 78p.
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010727338.095491/PAK 010727MainOn ShelfGeneral 
13
ID:   179679


effects of the new Feed-In Tariff Act for solar photovoltaic (PV) energy in the wake of the Fukushima accident in Japan / Wen, Daoyuan   Journal Article
Wen, Daoyuan Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract In 2012, the Japanese government launched the new Feed-In Tariff Act (FIT), which aimed at promoting the stable, integrated rise of renewable energy in the wake of the Fukushima nuclear accident. Solar photovoltaic (PV) energy on both the residential (installation capacity less than 10 kW) and non-residential side (installation capacity 10 kW and above) has been associated with significant benefits with the passage of the new FIT Act. However, a number of issues have emerged during implementation, including unjust enrichment from delayed PV plant operation and high renewable energy taxes. In this paper, we present an overview of the evolution of the FIT and explore how the relevant issues have been addressed through revised government policy. The paper also examines, the FIT’s effect on PV energy development. An economic analysis was conducted to identify the impact of FIT fixed price changes on the profitability of solar PV plants on both the residential and non-residential side from 2012 to 2019. Furthermore, a sensitivity analysis was conducted based on scenarios of future FIT fixed purchase price reductions and PV initial investment cost reductions. The results show that the FIT can potentially be reduced on the residential side and that the current FIT has reached its feasibility limits in terms of non-residential PV investments.
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14
ID:   113447


Evaluation of feed-in tariff regulation of Turkey for onshore w / Erturk, Mehmet   Journal Article
Erturk, Mehmet Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Renewable energy sources have become popular with the technological developments, the increase in the price of fossil fuels and the environmental concerns. These factors have also prompted Turkey to utilize her rich renewable energy sources to meet her increasing electricity demand which is around 7% annually. Therefore, the Renewable Energy Law was enacted in 2005 to incentivize the utilization of domestic renewable sources with feed-in tariffs. In this study, onshore wind energy potential of Turkey is analyzed to find out whether these regulations and incentives will help the utilization of onshore wind energy potential. To that end, some background information about technology and cost of onshore wind power plants, the wind energy potential of Turkey and the current regulatory framework related to wind energy are explained. Then, a model is set up to conduct economic analysis by calculating NPV for the base case scenario and under the uncertain environment. The results show that an onshore wind energy potential of about 13 GW having a wind speed of 7.5 m/s or higher can be utilized profitably with the current feed-in tariff as the wind capacity of more than 100 GW cannot be utilized economically.
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15
ID:   127207


Future of the European electricity system and the impact of flu: a scenario analysis / Spiecker, Stephan; Weber, Christoph   Journal Article
Weber, Christoph Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract the ongoing transformation of the European energy system comes along with new challenges, notably increasing amounts of power generation from intermittent sources like wind and solar. How current objectives for emission reduction can be reached in the future and what the future power system will look like is, however, not fully clear. In particular, power plant investments in the long run and power plant dispatch in the short run are subject to considerable uncertainty. Therefore an approach is presented which allows electricity market development to be assessed in the presence of stochastic power feed-in and endogenous investments in power plants and renewable energies. To illustrate the range of possible future developments, five scenarios for the European electricity system up to 2050 are investigated. Both generation investments and dispatch as well as utilization of transmission lines are optimized for these scenarios and additional sensitivity analyses are carried out.
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16
ID:   124224


Greenhouse gas emission measurement and Economic analysis of Iran natural gas fired power plants / Alavijeh, H Shahsavari; Kiyoumarsioskouei, A; Asheri, M H; Naemi, S   Journal Article
Alavijeh, H Shahsavari Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This study attempts to examine the natural gas fired power plants in Iran. The required data from natural gas fired power plants were gathered during 2008. The characteristics of thirty two gas turbine power plants and twenty steam power plants have been measured. Their emission factor values were then compared with the standards of Energy Protection Agency, Euro Union and World Bank. Emission factors of gas turbine and steam power plants show that gas turbine power plants have a better performance than steam power plants. For economic analysis, fuel consumption and environmental damages caused by the emitted pollutants are considered as cost functions; and electricity sales revenue are taken as benefit functions. All of these functions have been obtained according to the capacity factor. Total revenue functions show that gas turbine and steam power plants are economically efficient at 98.15% and 90.89% of capacity factor, respectively; this indicates that long operating years of power plants leads to reduction of optimum capacity factor. The stated method could be implemented to assess the economic status of a country's power plants where as efficient capacity factor close to one means that power plant works in much better condition.
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17
ID:   109358


Grid integration policies of gas-fired cogeneration in peninsul / Shaaban, M; Azit, A H; Nor, K M   Journal Article
Shaaban, M Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract Despite the abundance of natural gas reserves in Malaysia coupled with serious government thrusts to promote cogeneration, its (cogeneration) development pace lags far off expectations. There are widespread fallacies among potential cogeneration developers and concerned professionals that cogeneration is uncompetitive in Malaysia due to existing policies of subsidized gas prices and grid-connection charges. This paper exposes these fallacies through counterexamples of practical cogeneration system design and evaluation of some segments of the industrial and service sectors in Peninsular Malaysia. The electrical and thermal characteristics of the cogeneration were modeled based on heat rate characteristics at partial loading patterns. A hierarchical mathematical programming approach that uses mixed-integer nonlinear optimization and dynamic programming principle, if necessary, is employed to determine the optimal size of cogeneration and its related auxiliary equipment as well as the optimal operation schedule. Financial assessment is integrated at a later stage to assess the economic viability of the system. Analyses of the cogeneration potential for several facilities of miscellaneous activities were carried out using various gas and electricity prices. Results obtained consistently rebuff the perpetuated fallacies and confirm that there is no real barrier to cogeneration development in Malaysia under current policies of gas prices and electricity tariffs.
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18
ID:   134448


J.M. Keynes and the personal politics of reparations: Part 1 / Schuker, Stephen A   Article
Schuker, Stephen A Article
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Summary/Abstract Some observers still regard John Maynard Keynes’ polemic against the Treaty of Versailles as serious economic analysis. In fact, Keynes continued to play an unacknowledged partisan role in reparation diplomacy during the 1920s. He suggests in a memoir that he never saw the Hamburg banker Carl Melchior alone again after October 1919. Using German sources not exploited by Keynes’ principal biographers, this analysis shows that the intimate relationship continued. Melchior drew Keynes into the highest governing circles of the Reich. Keynes supported the 1922–1923 German hyper-inflation on political grounds and helped craft the German reparations note of June 1923.
Key Words Diplomacy  Economic analysis  Reparation  Keynes  German Relations 
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19
ID:   110578


Net cost of biofuels in Thailand-An economic analysis / David R. Bell; Thapat Silalertruksa; Shabbir H. Gheewala; Richard Kamens   Journal Article
David R. Bell Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract Biofuels are expected to represent a growing portion of liquid fuel consumption in Thailand due to environmental and social considerations in conjunction with policy goals supporting their domestic production and consumption. This paper reviews the economic costs associated with biofuel policy implementation in Thailand in the short term target year of 2011. Internal (production) and external (environmental, social, etc.) costs and benefits are evaluated, and, where possible, monetized. Domestic production of biofuel is calculated to be 9.5 billion THB (317 million USD) more expensive than importing the equivalent amount of petroleum. The environmental benefits from GHG savings as well as losses due to increased ground level ozone formation and government expenditure to support the biofuel industry yield a total "net cost" of 8.6 billion THB or 121 THB (4.04 USD) per capita for the year 2011. This result is contextualized with the (non-monetized) consideration that although biofuels are somewhat more expensive in the short term, their domestic production allows virtually all of the money to stay within the Thai economy as opposed to being sent abroad. This fact, coupled with significant uncertainty in future petroleum prices, could strongly influence the direction of Thai policy with respect to biofuels.
Key Words Thailand  Economic analysis  Biofuels 
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20
ID:   040776


Ovrheads costs: some essays in economic analysis / Lewis, W Arthur 1970  Book
Lewis, W Arthur Book
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Publication London, Unwin University Books, 1970.
Description 199p.
Standard Number 043301622
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
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005704338.51/LEW 005704MainOn ShelfGeneral 
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