Capital Transfer

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The Experts below are selected from a list of 69 Experts worldwide ranked by ideXlab platform

Jinfeng Zhou - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • effects of an energy tax carbon tax on energy saving and emission reduction in guangdong province based on a cge model
    Sustainability, 2017
    Co-Authors: Wei Chen, Jinfeng Zhou
    Abstract:

    Guangdong, as China’s most affluent province, which is representative in terms of its industrial and energy consumption structure, will deal with an important issue about how to change its environmental management policies from command-and-control strategies to incentive-based ones and how to exert its effects to the greatest extent possible in the new situation of the impending imposition of an environmental tax. By establishing an energy Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) model for Guangdong Province, and setting up various taxation and tax refund scenarios, this research simulates the energy saving and emission reduction effects imposed by the imposition of an energy tax or carbon tax at various tax rates in Guangdong Province, and analyzes the mitigation effects upon an economic system by various tax refund plans. The research proves that when the energy tax rate is at 100–200 yuan/tce (ton coal equivalent) or carbon tax at 50–100 yuan/t CO2, the energy consumption of Guangdong Province is reduced by 5.8–11.21%, and carbon emission is reduced by 5.94–11.61%. The energy saving and emission reduction effects of the carbon tax surpasses that of the energy tax under the equivalent tax revenue with even fewer significant negative impacts upon the economy, contributing to the Capital Transfer towards non-energy intensive industries; thus, appropriate and accurate tax refund plans can alleviate the negative impacts of taxation upon the economy in Guangdong Province.

Sergey Mityakov - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • determinants of bank firm lending relationship human Capital Transfer channel
    Social Science Research Network, 2019
    Co-Authors: Lucy Chernykh, Sergey Mityakov
    Abstract:

    We study the impact of human Capital Transfer from banks to non-financial firms on firms’ ability to borrow from banks. Using a unique, employee-employer matched dataset from Russia, we find that hiring an ex-banker increases a firm’s likelihood to secure a bank loan, and the effect is higher when a former bank manager is hired. By exploiting bank branches network restructuring as the source of exogenous shocks to the local supply of bank ex-employees, we establish that this relation is causal. Finally, we present evidence that, when Transferring to non- financial firms, ex-bankers bring not only knowledge and connections from their former banks, but also lending-related expertise which is applicable outside of their banks.

Kirsi Hasanen - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • re framing education export from the perspective of intellectual Capital Transfer
    Journal of Studies in International Education, 2018
    Co-Authors: Antti Lonnqvist, Harri Laihonen, Yuzhuo Cai, Kirsi Hasanen
    Abstract:

    This paper contributes to research on the internationalization of higher education by integrating two separate research fields, namely, education export and intellectual Capital. Specifically, we conceptualize education export as an activity aimed at Transferring intellectual Capital as a two-way process benefiting both provider and receiver, and apply this conceptualization to analyze the development and challenges of education export in a Finnish university. The empirical analysis demonstrates that intellectual Capital is a useful concept for gaining a more profound understanding of the different kinds of knowledge-based resources conveyed during an education export activity. Depicting education export as intellectual Capital Transfer may help overcome some of the manifold challenges of education export identified in the previous literature.

Maria Grazia Pittau - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • more unequal yet more alike the changing patterns of family formation generational mobility and household income inequality in china a counter factual analysis
    Journal of Economic Inequality, 2019
    Co-Authors: Gordon Anderson, Tongtong Hao, Maria Grazia Pittau
    Abstract:

    China’s household income inequality has grown steadily over the last 30 years. While many analyses focus on the effects of policies relating to urban-rural and inland-coastal distinctions, growth in inequality has prevailed on both sides of those respective divides suggesting something more fundamental is at play. Here, certain patterns of family formation and human Capital Transfer are shown to engender increases in household income inequality measures. A unique data set, linking grandparents, parents and children, yields evidence of structural change toward such patterns over successive cohorts of households. Influenced by such events as the Cultural Revolution, the One Child Policy and the Economic Reforms, people intensified positive assortative matching behaviors and polarizing human Capital transitions. Social class designations became less important and educational class designations became more important. A counterfactual analysis verified the impact of these changes on household income inequality in urban China, revealing increasing similarity between cohorts amidst growing inequality.

Wei Chen - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • effects of an energy tax carbon tax on energy saving and emission reduction in guangdong province based on a cge model
    Sustainability, 2017
    Co-Authors: Wei Chen, Jinfeng Zhou
    Abstract:

    Guangdong, as China’s most affluent province, which is representative in terms of its industrial and energy consumption structure, will deal with an important issue about how to change its environmental management policies from command-and-control strategies to incentive-based ones and how to exert its effects to the greatest extent possible in the new situation of the impending imposition of an environmental tax. By establishing an energy Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) model for Guangdong Province, and setting up various taxation and tax refund scenarios, this research simulates the energy saving and emission reduction effects imposed by the imposition of an energy tax or carbon tax at various tax rates in Guangdong Province, and analyzes the mitigation effects upon an economic system by various tax refund plans. The research proves that when the energy tax rate is at 100–200 yuan/tce (ton coal equivalent) or carbon tax at 50–100 yuan/t CO2, the energy consumption of Guangdong Province is reduced by 5.8–11.21%, and carbon emission is reduced by 5.94–11.61%. The energy saving and emission reduction effects of the carbon tax surpasses that of the energy tax under the equivalent tax revenue with even fewer significant negative impacts upon the economy, contributing to the Capital Transfer towards non-energy intensive industries; thus, appropriate and accurate tax refund plans can alleviate the negative impacts of taxation upon the economy in Guangdong Province.