00930cam a22002534a 4500991003874639707536080916s2000 nyuab b 001 0 eng 0415142105b13764433-39ule_instSet. Economia - SEMSita338.921Hodder, Rupert148067Development geography /Rupert HodderNew York :Routledge,2000xiii, 186 p. :ill., map ;25 cmRoutledge contemporary human geography seriesInclude bibliografia e indiceSviluppo economico.b1376443309-11-1816-09-08991003874639707536LE025 ECO 338.9 HOD01.0112025000105805le025Catalogato 2018-E25.17-l- 00000.i1483249518-09-08Development geography12695UNISALENTOle02516-09-08ma -engnyu0004386oam 22011534 450 991097230830332120250426110137.0978661383148497814623911721462391176978145275619614527561989781283519038128351903897814519861361451986130(CKB)3360000000444051(EBL)3014355(SSID)ssj0000941493(PQKBManifestationID)11509469(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000941493(PQKBWorkID)10964026(PQKB)11547009(OCoLC)698585567(IMF)WPIEE2006169(MiAaPQ)EBC3014355(IMF)WPIEA2006169WPIEA2006169(EXLCZ)99336000000044405120020129d2006 uf 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrInstitutions versus Geography : Subnational Evidence from the United States /Alma Romero-Barrutieta, Eric Clifton1st ed.Washington, D.C. :International Monetary Fund,2006.1 online resource (26 p.)IMF Working Papers"July 2006".9781451864298 1451864299 Includes bibliographical references.""Contents""; ""I. INTRODUCTION""; ""II. INSTITUTIONS AND GEOGRAPHY""; ""III. DATA""; ""IV. EVIDENCE""; ""V. CONCLUSIONS""; ""References""Empirical studies of the impact of geography and institutions on growth and development at the international level have become common place, but the high degree of abstraction at that level has led to calls for subnational studies. This paper examines these issues for a region of the United States, Appalachia, where the specific factors at play are identified and measured thus obviating the need for instrumental variable techniques. The evidence suggests that initial conditions, including both geography and institutions, are very important for economic development, having significant effects lasting hundreds of years.IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ;No. 2006/169Economic developmentEconomic geographyEconometric Modeling: GeneralimfEconometric modelsimfEconometrics & economic statisticsimfEconometricsimfEstimation techniquesimfEstimationimfIncomeimfInstitutional arrangements for revenue administrationimfMacroeconomicsimfPersonal incomeimfPersonal Income, Wealth, and Their DistributionsimfPoverty & precarityimfPoverty and HomelessnessimfPovertyimfPublic finance & taxationimfPublic FinanceimfRevenueimfSpatial modelsimfTaxation, Subsidies, and Revenue: GeneralimfWelfare, Well-Being, and Poverty: GeneralimfUnited StatesimfEconomic development.Economic geography.Econometric Modeling: GeneralEconometric modelsEconometrics & economic statisticsEconometricsEstimation techniquesEstimationIncomeInstitutional arrangements for revenue administrationMacroeconomicsPersonal incomePersonal Income, Wealth, and Their DistributionsPoverty & precarityPoverty and HomelessnessPovertyPublic finance & taxationPublic FinanceRevenueSpatial modelsTaxation, Subsidies, and Revenue: GeneralWelfare, Well-Being, and Poverty: GeneralRomero-Barrutieta Alma1816460Clifton Eric1816461DcWaIMFBOOK9910972308303321Institutions versus Geography4372550UNINA