Results for 'Market Price'

973 found
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  1.  50
    A Market Price for Organs?Rick Thomas - 2013 - The New Bioethics 19 (2):111-129.
    Has not the time fully come to lift the prohibition on a regulated market in organs for transplantation? Is there a price for such a market that would be too high to pay? The author revisits the cases for and against organ markets in the light of cultural shifts in society and asks whether the traditional insistence on altruism represents a hindrance to much needed developments or a safeguard for much valued public goods.
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  2.  94
    Valuing Others’ Information under Imperfect Expectations: A Cross-Individual Perspective on Harmful Information and Stock Market Price Reactions.Hagen Lindstädt - 2007 - Theory and Decision 62 (4):335-353.
    Sometimes we believe that others receive harmful information. However, Marschak’s value of information framework always assigns non-negative value under expected utility: it starts from the decision maker’s beliefs – and one can never anticipate information’s harmfulness for oneself. The impact of decision makers’ capabilities to process information and of their expectations remains hidden behind the individual and subjective perspective Marschak’s framework assumes. By introducing a second decision maker as a point of reference, this paper introduces a way for evaluating others’ (...)
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  3.  19
    A Mathematical Model of a Fishery with Variable Market Price: Sustainable Fishery/over-exploitation.Fulgence Mansal, Tri Nguyen-Huu, Pierre Auger & Moussa Balde - 2014 - Acta Biotheoretica 62 (3):305-323.
    We present a mathematical bioeconomic model of a fishery with a variable price. The model describes the time evolution of the resource, the fishing effort and the price which is assumed to vary with respect to supply and demand. The supply is the instantaneous catch while the demand function is assumed to be a monotone decreasing function of price. We show that a generic market price equation (MPE) can be derived and has to be solved (...)
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  4.  39
    Health care markets, prices, and coordination.John Meadowcroft - 2005 - HEC Forum 17 (3):159-177.
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  5.  10
    Indigenous and Popular Thinking in América.Joshua M. Price & María Lugones (eds.) - 2010 - Duke University Press.
    Originally published in Mexico in 1970, _Indigenous and Popular Thinking in América _is the first book by the Argentine philosopher Rodolfo Kusch to be translated into English. At its core is a binary created by colonization and the devaluation of indigenous practices and cosmologies: an opposition between the technologies and rationalities of European modernity and the popular mode of thinking, which is deeply tied to Indian ways of knowing and being. Arguing that this binary cuts through América, Kusch seeks to (...)
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  6.  45
    Evolution, green beards, and skin hue wage discrimination.Gregory N. Price - 2000 - World Futures 55 (4):341-355.
    This paper provides an evolutionary rationale for both interracial and intraracial wage differentials by examining the implications of white employers mediating their employer?employee relationships on the basis of genetic similarity. If in organized labor markets; relationships mediated through genetic similarity are optimal in terms of Darwinian fitness, a fundamental evolutionary implication is that the Marginal Rate of Substitution (MRS) in Darwinian fitness holding extended fitness constant equals the MRS in preferences holding utility constant. Given such an evolutionary equilibrium, results are (...)
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  7.  61
    Prizes and Parasites: Incentive Models for Addressing Chagas Disease.Sara E. Crager & Matt Price - 2009 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 37 (2):292-304.
    Despite the enormous progress made in the advancement of health technologies over the last century, infectious diseases continue to cause significant morbidity and mortality in developing countries. Neglected diseases are a subset of infectious diseases that lack treatments that are effective, simple to use, or affordable. Neglected diseases primarily affect populations in poor countries that do not constitute a lucrative market sector, thus failing to provide incentives for the pharmaceutical industry to conduct R&D for these diseases. Of the treatments (...)
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  8. Price Gouging and Market Failure.Matt Zwolinski - 2010 - In Gerald Gaus, Julian Lamont & Christi Favor (eds.), ESSAYS ON PHILOSOPHY, POLITICS & ECONOMIC: INTEGRATION AND COMMON RESEARCH PROJECTS. Stanford University Press.
    Price gouging occurs when, in the wake of an emergency, sellers of a certain necessary goods sharply raise their prices beyond the level needed to cover increased costs. Most people think that price gouging is immoral, and most states have laws rendering the practice a civil or criminal offense. But the alleged wrongness of price gouging has been seriously under-theorized. This paper examines the argument that price gouging is morally objectionable and/or the proper subject of legal (...)
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  9.  19
    The market valuation of ethical assets in Spain: an application of the hedonic pricing method.Celia Bilbao-Terol & Verónica Cañal-Fernández - 2014 - Business Ethics: A European Review 23 (4):343-363.
    The aim of this paper is to calculate the market valuation of non-financial characteristics, namely, the social responsibility criteria included in the Spanish Socially Responsible Investment Funds. The hedonic price method is applied for this purpose. This method relates the price of Socially Responsible Investment Funds with both financial and social responsibility characteristics. Because of the large number of social responsibility characteristics included in these funds, prior to application of the hedonic price method, the principal components (...)
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  10.  48
    De-marketing Tobacco Through Price Changes and Consumer Attempts Quit Smoking.Michelle Inness, Julian Barling, Keith Rogers & Nick Turner - 2008 - Journal of Business Ethics 77 (4):405-416.
    Using panel data from three Canadian provinces, this article examines the relationship between the de-marketing of tobacco products through provincial-level price increases and consumers’ attempts to quit smoking as measured by the uptake of tobacco replacement therapies. We ground our hypotheses in the rational addiction model and the theory of planned behavior. Our analyses suggest a positive, one-month lagged effect of a price increase of tobacco products on the uptake of tobacco replacement therapies. This effect dissipates 3 months (...)
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  11. (1 other version)Concepts of price fairness: Empirical research into the dutch coffee market.Robert Gielissen & Johan Graafland - 2009 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 18 (2):165-178.
    This paper researches perceptions of the concept of price fairness in the Dutch coffee market. We distinguish four alternative standards of fair prices based on egalitarian, basic rights, capitalistic and libertarian approaches. We investigate which standards are guiding the perceptions of price fairness of citizens and coffee trade organizations. We find that there is a divergence in views between citizens and key players in the coffee market. Whereas citizens support the concept of fairness derived from the (...)
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  12.  23
    Price Reaction of Ethically Screened Stocks: A Study of the Dow Jones Islamic Market World Index.Khelifa Mazouz, Abdulkadir Mohamed & Brahim Saadouni - 2019 - Journal of Business Ethics 154 (3):683-699.
    This paper investigates the short-term effects on the price of the ethically screened stocks of the Dow Jones Islamic Market World Index quarterly revisions. Using a sample of 8250 stocks from May 1999 through June 2012, we find a significant price reaction of the ethically screened stocks following additions and deletions. The results show that additions from emerging stock markets tend to experience a greater and significantly positive price response than additions from the developed markets. Further (...)
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  13.  54
    The Power of Pills: Social, Ethical & Legal Issues in Drug Development, Marketing & Pricing – Edited by Jillian C. Cohen, Patricia Illingworth & Udo Schüklenk. [REVIEW]Steven Lewis - 2009 - Developing World Bioethics 9 (1):43-45.
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  14.  10
    Ascending-price mechanism for general multi-sided markets.Dvir Gilor, Rica Gonen & Erel Segal-Halevi - 2023 - Artificial Intelligence 325 (C):104022.
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  15.  31
    Crisis Prices: The Ethics of Market Controls during a Global Pandemic.Kobi Finestone & Ewan Kingston - 2022 - Business Ethics Quarterly 32 (1):12-40.
    SARS-CoV-2 has unleashed an unprecedented global crisis that has caused the demand for essential goods, such as medical and sanitation products, to soar while simultaneously disrupting the very supply chains that allow individuals and institutions to obtain those essential goods. This has resulted in stark price increases and accusations of price gouging. We survey the existing philosophical literature that examines price gouging and identify the key arguments for regulators permitting such behavior and for regulators restricting such behavior. (...)
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  16.  49
    Price Linkage Rumors in the Stock Market and Investor Risk Contagion on Bilayer-Coupled Networks.Yue Dong, Jiepeng Wang & Tingqiang Chen - 2019 - Complexity 2019:1-21.
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  17.  49
    Preferences and the price of stability in matching markets.James W. Boudreau & Vicki Knoblauch - 2013 - Theory and Decision 74 (4):565-589.
    This paper studies welfare tradeoffs in two-sided, one-to-one matching markets. We begin by providing theoretical upper bounds on a utilitarian price of stability, and show that these bounds vary with the composition of participants’ ordinal preference lists. We then turn to simulation experiments to describe how changes in basic characteristics of agents’ preferences can increase or decrease the average price of stability as measured by both utilitarian and Rawlsian welfare criteria. Our results indicate that markets featuring moderate degrees (...)
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  18.  10
    Prices in Financial Markets.Michael U. Dothan - 1990 - Oxford University Press USA.
    This book offers a unified treatment of selected topics in the theory of financial markets. Starting with discrete time models, Dothan introduces discrete time stochastic calculus and discrete martingale methods of intuitive simplicity to characterize attainability, completeness, pricing, and the relationship between risk and return in financial markets. Subsequently, he uses the intuition developed in conjunction with the discrete time theory to introduce continuous time calculus for continuous, jump, and mixed continuous-jump processes, and to deal with attainability, completeness, pricing, and (...)
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  19. The just price, exploitation, and prescription drugs: why free marketeers should object to profiteering by the pharmaceutical industry.Mark R. Reiff - 2019 - Review of Social Economy 77:1-36.
    Many people have been enraged lately by the enormous increases in certain generic prescription drugs. But free marketeers defend these prices by arguing that they simply represent what the market will bear, and in a capitalist society there is accordingly nothing wrong with charging them. This paper argues that such a defense is actually contrary to the very principles that free marketeers claim to embrace. These prices are not only unjust and exploitative, but government interference with them would not (...)
     
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  20.  5
    “Fresh Start” Messaging, “Rebirth Associations,” and Consumers’ Environmentally Sustainable Actions.Yuliya Strizhakova, Robin A. Coulter & Linda L. Price - forthcoming - Journal of Business Ethics:1-21.
    What do consumers do with their used clothing, books, and children’s toys? In this research, we introduce metaphoric “fresh start” messaging as an effective tactic to encourage consumers to engage in environmentally sustainable actions of donating used products for remanufacture or reuse. Drawing on conceptual metaphor theory and construal theory, we contrast metaphoric “fresh start” messaging with dominant “reduce waste” and “recycle” non-metaphoric environmental messages. Across six experimental studies, metaphoric “fresh start” messaging is more effective in increasing environmentally sustainable actions, (...)
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  21.  58
    The Just Price as the Price Obtainable in an Open Market.Juan M. Elegido - 2015 - Journal of Business Ethics 130 (3):557-572.
    This article argues that the price obtainable in an open market provides the best standard for determining the justice or injustice of the price of a product. The article argues that this standard, which is closely related to positions which have been held for hundreds of years, is superior to several alternative conceptions of the just price that have been put forward in recent years and is not subject to fundamental criticisms which can be addressed to (...)
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  22.  25
    Pricing Carbon and the Beneficiary Pays Principle: Framing Market-Based Incentives around Compensation Obligations.J. Spencer Atkins - 2019 - Ethics, Policy and Environment 22 (2):148-150.
    Volume 22, Issue 2, June 2019, Page 148-150.
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  23. (1 other version)4. Price and Market Equilibrium Analysis.Michael Shute - 2010 - In Lonergan's Early Economic Research: Texts and Commentary. University of Toronto Press. pp. 102-110.
     
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  24.  17
    Effectiveness of Price Limit on Stock Market Network: A Time-Migrated DCCA Approach.Hongzeng He & Shufen Dai - 2021 - Complexity 2021:1-13.
    In this paper, we investigated the effectiveness of price limit on stock market with the correlation study and complex network technology. We proposed a time-migrated DCCA cross-correlation coefficient which is beneficial to detect the asynchronous correlations of nonstationary time series. The stock market network is constructed with the threshold method based on time-migrated DCCA. The effectiveness of the price limit during the stock market crash period is studied based on the time-migrated DCCA stock market (...)
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  25.  95
    The Market's Price.Rahel Jaeggi - 2001 - Constellations 8 (3):400-412.
    Book reviewed in this article:Elizabeth Anderson, Value in Ethics and EconomicsMargaret Jane Radin, Contested Commodities.
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  26.  14
    Just Price in the Markets: A History.Charles R. Geisst - 2023 - Yale University Press.
    _A concise history of “just price,” from Aristotle to the present day_ The question of what constitutes a fair price has been at the center of market interactions since the time of Aristotle. Should a seller sell to the highest bidder, or is there some other standard, such as a morally defined price, to be applied? Charles R. Geisst traces the ways that philosophers, religious leaders, and economists have sought to answer that question, from antiquity through (...)
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  27.  23
    Impact of oil prices on stock returns: Evidence from pakistan’s stock market.Zeeshan Atiq & Muhammad Farhan - 2018 - Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities 57 (2):47-63.
    Very few studies have investigated the movement in stock returns that result due to changes in oil prices. In recent years due to cooling down of China, unveiled oil reserves of Iran, decreasing demand worldwide and discovery of shale gases the world has experienced a large fall in the oil prices. These changes are also affecting performance of manufacturing and other associated companies in countries all over the world. Pakistan has also been affected by these changes in many ways. Especially, (...)
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  28.  40
    Beyond mechanical markets – asset price swings, risk and the role of the state.Kevin D. Hoover - 2013 - Journal of Economic Methodology 20 (1):69 - 75.
    (2013). Beyond mechanical markets – asset price swings, risk and the role of the state. Journal of Economic Methodology: Vol. 20, Methodology, Systemic Risk, and the Economics Profession, pp. 69-75. doi: 10.1080/1350178X.2013.774856.
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  29. If the Price is Right: The Ethics and Efficiency of Market Solutions to the Organ Shortage.Andreas Albertsen - 2020 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 17 (3):357-367.
    Due to the shortage of organs, it has been proposed that the ban on organ sales is lifted and a market-based procurement system introduced. This paper assesses four prominent proposals for how such a market could be arranged: unregulated current market, regulated current market, payment-for-consent futures market, and the family-reward futures market. These are assessed in terms of how applicable prominent concerns with organ sales are for each model. The concerns evaluated are that organ (...)
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  30.  12
    Foundations of Business Economics: Markets and Prices.Harry Townsend - 1995 - Routledge.
    _Foundatioins of Business Economics_ explains microeconomic analysis in terms of real business situations. The underlying theme of the book is the way in which markets link together interdependent activities and how they confront and solve problems of information. The book covers a wide range of issues, including *The economic way of thinking *The Business environment *Product markets *Market failure *Factor markets *General equilibrium Theory is developed carefully but with a light touch and mathematics kept to a minimum, making the (...)
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  31.  16
    Copyright, pricing and market power: The great journals debate.Colin Day - 1995 - Logos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 6 (1):39-42.
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  32.  24
    A Buyer's Market? Fixing the Price for Human Ova for Assisted Reproduction.Sandra H. Johnson - 2015 - Hastings Center Report 45 (6):9-10.
    The Wall Street Journal article “Putting a Price on a Human Egg” triggered extensive media coverage of a rather unusual challenge to payments made to women providing ova for use in assisted reproduction. In Kamakahi v. American Society for Reproductive Medicine and Society for Assisted Reproductive Technologies, plaintiffs claim that ASRM and SART policies adopting limits on such payments violate the federal antitrust prohibition against price fixing.In 2007, an ASRM Ethics Committee Report, confirming a 2000 report, asserted that, (...)
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  33.  15
    Can Insurance Market Competition Coexist With Provider Price Regulation? Evidence From Medicare Advantage.Robert A. Berenson, Judith Feder & Laura Skopec - 2019 - Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 56:004695801985528.
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  34.  22
    Price, Principle, and the Environment.Mark Sagoff - 2004 - Cambridge University Press.
    Mark Sagoff has written an engaging and provocative book about the contribution economics can make to environmental policy. Sagoff argues that economics can be helpful in designing institutions and processes through which people can settle environmental disputes. However, he contends that economic analysis fails completely when it attempts to attach value to environmental goods. It fails because preference-satisfaction has no relation to any good. Economic valuation lacks data because preferences cannot be observed. Willingness to pay is benchmarked on market (...)
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  35. On the Wisdom of Algorithmic Markets: Governance by Algorithmic Price.Pip Thornton & John Danaher - manuscript
    Leading digital platform providers such as Google and Uber construct marketplaces in which algorithms set prices. The efficiency-maximising free market credentials of this approach are touted by the companies involved and by legislators, policy makers and marketers. They have also taken root in the public imagination. In this article we challenge this understanding of algorithmically constructed marketplaces. We do so by returning to Hayek’s (1945) classic defence of the price mechanism, and by arguing that algorithmically-mediated price mechanisms (...)
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  36.  29
    The Just Price, the Free Market, and the Value of Women.Alice Kessler-Harris - 1988 - Feminist Studies 14 (2):235.
  37. Isabelle Graw, High Price: Art between the Market and Celebrity Culture.Philipp Kleinmichel - 2010 - Radical Philosophy 164:55.
     
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  38. Pricing Carbon for Climate Justice.Alexandre Gajevic Sayegh - 2019 - Ethics, Policy and Environment 22 (2):109-130.
    This paper focuses on one particular case that connects climate justice and climate economics. Its contribution is twofold. First, it aims at providing a sound normative foundation for carbon pricing mechanisms around the notions of a ‘right to energy’, the ‘duty not-to-harm’ and an argument for ‘restricted compensation’. Second, it identifies the normative elements from theories of climate justice that should guide the design of market-based instruments for climate change mitigation. This will cast light on the particular moral relevance (...)
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  39.  24
    Investors and Markets: Portfolio Choices, Asset Prices, and Investment Advice.William F. Sharpe - 2008 - Princeton University Press.
    In this book, Sharpe changes that by setting out his state-of-the-art approach to asset pricing in a nonmathematical form that will be comprehensible to a broad range of investment professionals, including investment advisors, money ...
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  40. 'Preferred Provider Organizations: Injecting Price Competition into the Hospital Market.David Dranove, Mark Satterthwaite & Jody Sindelar - 1986 - Inquiry (Misc) 23 (4):419-31.
     
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  41. The price of pain and the value of suffering.Nick Chater & Raymond J. Dolan - unknown
    Estimating the financial value of pain informs issues as diverse as the market price of analgesics, the cost-effectiveness of clinical treatments, compensation for injury, and the response to public hazards. Such costs are assumed to reflect a stable trade-off between relief of discomfort and money. Here, using an auction-based health market experiment, we show the price people pay for relief of pain is strongly determined by the local context of the market, determined either by recent (...)
     
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  42.  25
    Big Data Market Optimization Pricing Model Based on Data Quality.Jian Yang, Chongchong Zhao & Chunxiao Xing - 2019 - Complexity 2019:1-10.
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  43.  29
    On the Price of Morals in Markets: An Empirical Study of the Swedish AP-Funds and the Norwegian Government Pension Fund.Andreas G. F. Hoepner & Lisa Schopohl - 2018 - Journal of Business Ethics 151 (3):665-692.
    This study empirically analyses the exclusion of companies from investors’ investment universe due to a company’s business model or due to a company’s violations of international norms. We conduct a time-series analysis of the performance implications of the exclusion decisions of two leading Nordic investors, Norway’s Government Pension Fund-Global and Sweden’s AP-funds. We find that their portfolios of excluded companies do not generate an abnormal return relative to the funds’ benchmark index. While the exclusion portfolios show higher risk than the (...)
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  44. Price gouging, non-worseness, and distributive justice.Matt Zwolinski - 2009 - Business Ethics Quarterly 19 (2):295-306.
    This paper develops my position on the ethics of price gouging in response to Jeremy Snyder's article, "What's the Matter with Price Gouging." First, it explains how the "nonworseness claim" supports the moral permissibility of price gouging, even if it does not show that price gougers are morally virtuous agents. Second, it argues that questions about price gouging and distributive justice must be answered in light of the relevant possible institutional alternatives, and that Snyder's proposed (...)
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  45.  33
    The Market.Karin Knorr Cetina - 2006 - Theory, Culture and Society 23 (2-3):551-556.
    Markets have led a shadowy existence in economics. The ruling paradigm, neoclassical economics, for which markets are a central institution, has mainly been concerned with the determination of market prices. Until recently, sociological investigations of modern markets focused on production, as did anthropological work that ascertained how each culture made a living. The major debate among anthropologists to date has been about whether the economic rationality of the maximizing individual is to be found in all societies or whether substantive (...)
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  46.  16
    On fair price discrimination in multi-unit markets.Michele Flammini, Manuel Mauro & Matteo Tonelli - 2021 - Artificial Intelligence 290 (C):103388.
  47.  34
    When Markets Aren’t Markets: a Reply to David Rondel.Savriël Dillingh - 2023 - Philosophia 51 (1):139-148.
    In a recent article in this journal, David Rondel argues that symbolic (or semiotic) objections to markets hold significant argumentative force. Rondel distinguishes betweenIncidentalmarkets andPervasivemarkets, where Incidental markets describe individual instances of exchange and Pervasive markets comprise the social management of goods by an institutional market arrangement. In this reply, I specify a key insight that buttresses Rondel’s distinction. The distinction as it is currently characterized fails to identify when Incidental markets become Pervasive. This opaqueness allows scholars that defend (...)
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  48.  18
    The Dynamic Impacts of the Global Shipping Market under the Background of Oil Price Fluctuations and Emergencies.Zihan Chen, Xiaokong Zhang & Jian Chai - 2021 - Complexity 2021:1-13.
    With growing uncertainty about the evolution of the global landscape, it is of great practical significance to explore the nonlinear dynamic adjustment relationship among the world oil market, the global bulk shipping market, the stock market, and economic growth in China. This paper applied the TVP-SV-VAR model and selected quarterly data from 1998 to 2020 to explore the dynamics. The results indicated that the impact intensity of BDI on China’s economy had a “positive” to “negative” change in (...)
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  49. The market, competition, and equality.Peter Dietsch - 2010 - Politics, Philosophy and Economics 9 (2):213-244.
    How much inequality does market interaction generate? The answer to this question partly depends on the level of competition among economic agents. Yet, in their normative analysis of the market, theories of distributive justice focus on individual characteristics such as talents as determinants of income, and tend to ignore structural features such as competition. Economists, on the other hand, dispose of the conceptual tools to assess the distributive impact of competition, but their analysis is usually limited to allocative (...)
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  50.  10
    Pricing algorithms in oligopoly with decreasing returns.Jacques Thépot - 2021 - Theory and Decision 91 (4):493-515.
    Pricing algorithms are computerized procedures a seller may use to adapt instantaneously its price to market conditions, including to prices quoted by its rivals. These algorithms are related to the extensive use of web-collectors which contribute in many industries to identifying the best price. In such settings, price competition operates between algorithms, no longer between executives of brick and mortar companies. In this context, the question is to know how implicit forms of collusion may arise between (...)
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