Mactac Soignies Carte Couleurs Films Adhésifs MACcrystal 8400Mactac Europe
Description
MACcrystal 8400 de MACtac sont des films PVC transparents colorés brillants.
Ces films sont spécialement traités pour garantir une coloration transparente homogène.
MACcrystal 8400 est spécialement conçu pour assurer une découpe par ordinateur et un échenillage facile et rapide même pour des petits caractères ainsi que de fins filets.
Adhésif
Adhésif acrylique permanent transparent à base solvant.
Protecteur
Papier kraft blanc de 135 g/m2 très stable, avec impression bleue au dos.
Domaines d’utilisation
MACcrystal 8400 est utilisé pour la réalisation d’enseignes lumineuses à partir de matériaux opalins (verre acrylique).
MACcrystal 8400 convient également pour des décorations de vitres.
Appseleration is a full-service provider for mobile solutions in Germany, with 40 employees who offer strategic consulting, concept and design, project management, portfolio management, app development, quality testing, appstore management, and app marketing services. They have developed over 20 apps as references, ranging from simple apps with a few screens and no backend access to complex enterprise apps with their own backends and many interactive features. The cost to develop an app can range from 760 euros for a simple app to over 500,000 euros for a complex custom app with unique requirements.
Dear students get fully solved assignments
Send your semester & Specialization name to our mail id :
“ help.mbaassignments@gmail.com ”
or
Call us at : 08263069601
(Prefer mailing. Call in emergency
1) O documento discute como o Brasil está destinado a desempenhar um importante papel moral e espiritual no futuro devido à sua liderança no Espiritismo.
2) O Espiritismo no Brasil está livre de preconceitos e une pessoas de diferentes raças sob laços de fraternidade universal.
3) Novas descobertas científicas sobre a pluralidade de mundos e vidas trarão a comprovação da reencarnação, consolidando o Brasil como farol espiritual.
This document is a project report submitted by Kamaliya Pankaj in partial fulfillment of an MBA degree. The report compares equity schemes of the top 3 asset management companies in India for the 2011-13 year. It was submitted to Prof. Ranjani Srinivasan of S.K. Patel Institute of Management and Computer Studies.
The document outlines a lesson plan for a business studies class on the importance of delegation of authority. It includes the name of the teacher, school, subject, unit, and standard being taught. The lesson plan has three phases: an introductory phase where the teacher engages students in a problem-solving activity about delegation; a group discussion phase where students discuss the advantages of delegation; and a concluding phase where a student summarizes the key points and the teacher reviews the material. The overall goal is for students to understand the concept of delegation of authority and its importance in management.
The document shows survey data from 509 outlets on the availability of Bisleri, Aquafina, and other branded water products. It found that Bisleri 500ml bottles were available in 43.61% of outlets, while Aquafina was available in 24.95% of outlets. For 1 liter bottles, Bisleri had the highest availability at 52.25% of outlets compared to 12.57% for Aquafina. Bisleri 20 liter bottles were found in 1 outlet, while Bisleri 2 liter bottles were available in 1 outlet.
Mactac Soignies Carte Couleurs Films Adhésifs MACcrystal 8400Mactac Europe
Description
MACcrystal 8400 de MACtac sont des films PVC transparents colorés brillants.
Ces films sont spécialement traités pour garantir une coloration transparente homogène.
MACcrystal 8400 est spécialement conçu pour assurer une découpe par ordinateur et un échenillage facile et rapide même pour des petits caractères ainsi que de fins filets.
Adhésif
Adhésif acrylique permanent transparent à base solvant.
Protecteur
Papier kraft blanc de 135 g/m2 très stable, avec impression bleue au dos.
Domaines d’utilisation
MACcrystal 8400 est utilisé pour la réalisation d’enseignes lumineuses à partir de matériaux opalins (verre acrylique).
MACcrystal 8400 convient également pour des décorations de vitres.
Appseleration is a full-service provider for mobile solutions in Germany, with 40 employees who offer strategic consulting, concept and design, project management, portfolio management, app development, quality testing, appstore management, and app marketing services. They have developed over 20 apps as references, ranging from simple apps with a few screens and no backend access to complex enterprise apps with their own backends and many interactive features. The cost to develop an app can range from 760 euros for a simple app to over 500,000 euros for a complex custom app with unique requirements.
Dear students get fully solved assignments
Send your semester & Specialization name to our mail id :
“ help.mbaassignments@gmail.com ”
or
Call us at : 08263069601
(Prefer mailing. Call in emergency
1) O documento discute como o Brasil está destinado a desempenhar um importante papel moral e espiritual no futuro devido à sua liderança no Espiritismo.
2) O Espiritismo no Brasil está livre de preconceitos e une pessoas de diferentes raças sob laços de fraternidade universal.
3) Novas descobertas científicas sobre a pluralidade de mundos e vidas trarão a comprovação da reencarnação, consolidando o Brasil como farol espiritual.
This document is a project report submitted by Kamaliya Pankaj in partial fulfillment of an MBA degree. The report compares equity schemes of the top 3 asset management companies in India for the 2011-13 year. It was submitted to Prof. Ranjani Srinivasan of S.K. Patel Institute of Management and Computer Studies.
The document outlines a lesson plan for a business studies class on the importance of delegation of authority. It includes the name of the teacher, school, subject, unit, and standard being taught. The lesson plan has three phases: an introductory phase where the teacher engages students in a problem-solving activity about delegation; a group discussion phase where students discuss the advantages of delegation; and a concluding phase where a student summarizes the key points and the teacher reviews the material. The overall goal is for students to understand the concept of delegation of authority and its importance in management.
The document shows survey data from 509 outlets on the availability of Bisleri, Aquafina, and other branded water products. It found that Bisleri 500ml bottles were available in 43.61% of outlets, while Aquafina was available in 24.95% of outlets. For 1 liter bottles, Bisleri had the highest availability at 52.25% of outlets compared to 12.57% for Aquafina. Bisleri 20 liter bottles were found in 1 outlet, while Bisleri 2 liter bottles were available in 1 outlet.
2014.11.28 - NAEC Group Meeting_Stefano ScarpettaOECD_NAEC
This document summarizes a meeting that discussed promoting inclusive growth through income, jobs, and health. It finds:
1) Higher income inequality lowers economic growth, while redistribution has not lowered growth.
2) Inequality undermines education opportunities for the poor by restricting access to credit.
3) Job quality, including earnings, security, and work environment, is important for well-being and economic performance beyond just employment levels.
4) Health and socioeconomic factors have a two-way relationship where socioeconomic disadvantages lead to health differences, and poor health drives inequality.
2014.11.28 - NAEC Group Meeting_Lamia Kamal-ChaouiOECD_NAEC
This document summarizes the work of the OECD's Inclusive Growth Initiative. It established a multidimensional framework to measure inclusive growth that accounts for income as well as non-income factors like employment and health. Between 2012-2014, the initiative delivered reports applying this framework and identifying policy areas that can boost both growth and inclusiveness. Going forward, it will refine the methodology, integrate inclusive growth analysis across policy sectors, and conduct national and regional case studies to strengthen the evidence base and mainstream inclusive growth policymaking.
2014.11.28 - NAEC Group Meeting_DSG TamakiOECD_NAEC
The OECD, IEA, ITF, and NEA have been tasked with examining how to better align policies across different areas to support a successful transition to sustainable low-carbon economies. This will include looking at economic, fiscal, financial, competition, employment and other policies. A key challenge is that existing policy frameworks were developed for fossil fuel-based economies. The report to Ministers in 2015 will provide examples of how to reform policies in areas like electricity markets, mobility incentives, land use, long-term investment, taxation, innovation, and international trade to support low-carbon transitions. The agencies will seek input on policy alignment issues and solutions through committee reviews, a seminar, and the NAEC Group meeting before reporting
2014.11.28 - NAEC Group Meeting_Shardul agrawalaOECD_NAEC
1) The document discusses new approaches to addressing environmental challenges. It focuses on three projects examining the costs of policy inaction on issues like climate change, the impact of tighter environmental policies on productivity, and the economic and social effects of environmental reforms.
2) It finds that the costs of inaction on climate change are substantial, with global damages estimated to reach 5-9% of GDP by 2100 under a business as usual scenario. Tighter environmental policies also do not necessarily harm productivity when properly designed.
3) The document advocates assessing reforms using macroeconomic models and microsimulation to evaluate their efficiency, environmental effectiveness, and distributional consequences like the impact of fossil fuel subsidy phase outs on household income.
2014.11.28 - NAEC Group Meeting_Adrian Blundell-WignallOECD_NAEC
The document discusses several issues related to finance and the economy. It notes that financial deregulation and innovation led to the 2008 liquidity crisis due to complex derivatives and relationships between counterparties. Since then, derivatives have shifted from banks to shadow banks. There has also been an emerging market bubble in corporate credit as investors seek yield. The document raises concerns about liquidity risks if interest rates rise or demand slows, given the shift away from banks as liquidity providers. It argues that new approaches are needed to encourage long-term, sustainable investment by non-banks.
1) The ECB Governor found conventional economic models provided limited help during the financial crisis as they failed to predict or explain what was happening.
2) He welcomed inspiration from other disciplines like physics, engineering, psychology and biology to develop new tools to improve the robustness of their framework.
3) A multi-disciplinary group at UCL is developing approaches using narratives and emotions extracted from big data sources like news to provide early warnings and better understand economic uncertainties.
The document discusses using numbers and narratives to explore evolutionary potential. It addresses using quantified self data from things like fitness trackers to go beyond conventional text analysis. It also discusses the need for proper sampling, transparency in algorithms, and shifting from linear to nonlinear views of policy and action. The document also examines monitoring networks of micro-narratives, detecting patterns in outcomes, and managing for serendipity.
The document discusses the use of narratives and numbers in climate change science and policymaking. It notes that while climate models provide quantitative projections, there is still significant uncertainty. Narratives are therefore also used to describe potential climate futures in a qualitative way. The "2 degree Celsius" narrative in particular aims to motivate climate action by framing 2C as the maximum safe level of warming. However, it emerged indirectly and its cost-benefit analysis is still debated. The document argues that to best inform policymaking, climate projections need to better integrate narratives with socioeconomic factors to assess impacts across scales and sectors. Foresight approaches should combine top-down and bottom-up methods to explore uncertain long-term issues like climate change.
This document summarizes Shell's process for developing qualitative scenarios to model energy demand and futures. It discusses how Shell uses scenarios to test strategies, identify opportunities and threats, and make risky decisions more transparent. Scenarios are developed through analyzing interactions between politics, environment, technology, society and economics. They must be plausible, internally consistent, challenging and have consequences. Shell's scenario methodology includes understanding key uncertainties and developing quantitative models to underpin qualitative storylines about different potential futures.
This document discusses how ancient Greeks navigated uncertainty through oracles and narratives. It explores how oracles did not make predictions, but offered alternative stories that allowed people to create meaning and motivation. By generating potential stories for the future, oracles helped ancient Greeks navigate risk and make decisions. The document presents examples of oracle sites in Greece, the types of questions Greeks asked oracles, and images that help illustrate oracle practices.
The document discusses trends in currency-based measures taken by countries between 2005-2013. It finds that:
1) Emerging market economies had more currency-based measures in place in 2005, with limits on bank's net foreign exchange positions being most common.
2) From 2005-2013, countries eased currency-based measures leading up to the financial crisis, while tightening them more after 2008. Tightening focused on restricting foreign currency inflows and outflows through banks.
3) A few OECD countries actively increased restrictions over the period, while non-OECD economies liberalized significantly through adjustments to existing measures.
This document summarizes a seminar discussing the effects of growth-enhancing policies on microeconomic stability. It finds that while some pro-growth reforms can increase instability at the individual level, deeper reforms may boost growth without increasing volatility. Reforms like reducing employment protections and unemployment benefits can increase worker reallocation and earnings volatility, while well-designed social programs and competitive markets can attenuate these impacts. Policy settings are linked to a country's distance from the growth-volatility frontier, showing the importance of balancing economic goals.
This document summarizes a study on the effects of growth-enhancing policies on microeconomic stability. The study finds that policies promoting growth, such as reducing employment protection and product market regulation, can increase microeconomic instability for firms, workers, and households. However, deeper reforms may boost growth without raising instability. The analysis also shows that tax-benefit systems play a key role in attenuating the impact of individual income volatility on overall household income changes. While some pro-growth reforms have trade-offs with stability and inequality, well-designed policies, like expanding active labor market programs, can promote both growth and stability.
This document summarizes a presentation given at an OECD seminar on skills distribution, wage inequality, and social inequality. The presentation analyzed data from the OECD Survey of Adult Skills to examine the relationship between the distribution of numeracy skills across countries and wage inequality. It found that countries with a more unequal distribution of numeracy skills, such as the US and France, tended to have higher wage inequality. Differences in how skills and education are rewarded in the labor market, rather than differences in average skill levels, accounted for 30-90% of the variation in wage inequality between countries.
2014.10.10 - NAEC Seminar_Identifying Social and Emotional SkillsOECD_NAEC
The document discusses the role of social and emotional skills in human capital development and social progress. It argues that developing social and emotional skills in children is an important yet underutilized means of addressing socio-economic challenges. Evidence shows that social and emotional skills can significantly impact education, employment, health and other outcomes. The OECD can help by developing tools to reliably measure these skills and conducting policy analysis to inform national strategies.
This document outlines New Zealand's approach to national security which focuses on building resilience through a systems approach. It emphasizes managing risks, reducing vulnerabilities, and building resilience within the same framework. Recent crises in New Zealand like earthquakes and industrial accidents highlighted the importance of this approach and lessons around strengthening infrastructure, community support, and adaptive emergency management.
This document discusses how to make wise decisions in an uncertain global environment prone to surprises and shocks. It recommends building resilience by identifying sources of strength, conducting stress tests of policies, and choosing options that increase diversity, adaptability, decentralization, and connections while avoiding long-term commitments or reliance on single predictions. An example portfolio of resilience-building measures for Finland is provided, ranging from investment in trade partnerships to innovation for difficult economic periods. The goal is to develop a subset of actions that increase the ability to succeed across a variety of potential situations.
Governments face novel risks from increased shock events like disasters and crises in complex interconnected systems. Boosting resilience is important to minimize welfare losses. Resilience requires anticipating shocks, adapting, and learning. Major shocks can cause economic losses exceeding 20% of GDP with impacts propagating across sectors and borders. The OECD recommends a holistic risk governance approach integrating prevention, crisis management, and continual improvement to strengthen resilience at all levels.
2014.09.22 - NAEC Seminar_Origins of the crisisOECD_NAEC
The document analyzes the determinants of the financial crisis, identifying three key factors: 1) Low interest rates increased the supply of credit. 2) Rising income inequality and growth of institutional investors increased demand for mortgages and securitized bonds. 3) The rise of shadow banking and enabling factors allowed risks to accumulate in the financial system.
2014_09_19_NAEC Seminar_How good is your jobOECD_NAEC
The document discusses new approaches to measuring and assessing job quality. It proposes a framework that defines three key dimensions of job quality - earnings quality, labor market security, and quality of the working environment. It presents indicators to measure each dimension and compares job quality outcomes across OECD countries and socioeconomic groups. The framework aims to allow a more comprehensive assessment of labor market performance and the role of policies in determining job quality outcomes. Future work will expand the analysis to more countries and take a more dynamic perspective on career prospects.
2014.11.28 - NAEC Group Meeting_Stefano ScarpettaOECD_NAEC
This document summarizes a meeting that discussed promoting inclusive growth through income, jobs, and health. It finds:
1) Higher income inequality lowers economic growth, while redistribution has not lowered growth.
2) Inequality undermines education opportunities for the poor by restricting access to credit.
3) Job quality, including earnings, security, and work environment, is important for well-being and economic performance beyond just employment levels.
4) Health and socioeconomic factors have a two-way relationship where socioeconomic disadvantages lead to health differences, and poor health drives inequality.
2014.11.28 - NAEC Group Meeting_Lamia Kamal-ChaouiOECD_NAEC
This document summarizes the work of the OECD's Inclusive Growth Initiative. It established a multidimensional framework to measure inclusive growth that accounts for income as well as non-income factors like employment and health. Between 2012-2014, the initiative delivered reports applying this framework and identifying policy areas that can boost both growth and inclusiveness. Going forward, it will refine the methodology, integrate inclusive growth analysis across policy sectors, and conduct national and regional case studies to strengthen the evidence base and mainstream inclusive growth policymaking.
2014.11.28 - NAEC Group Meeting_DSG TamakiOECD_NAEC
The OECD, IEA, ITF, and NEA have been tasked with examining how to better align policies across different areas to support a successful transition to sustainable low-carbon economies. This will include looking at economic, fiscal, financial, competition, employment and other policies. A key challenge is that existing policy frameworks were developed for fossil fuel-based economies. The report to Ministers in 2015 will provide examples of how to reform policies in areas like electricity markets, mobility incentives, land use, long-term investment, taxation, innovation, and international trade to support low-carbon transitions. The agencies will seek input on policy alignment issues and solutions through committee reviews, a seminar, and the NAEC Group meeting before reporting
2014.11.28 - NAEC Group Meeting_Shardul agrawalaOECD_NAEC
1) The document discusses new approaches to addressing environmental challenges. It focuses on three projects examining the costs of policy inaction on issues like climate change, the impact of tighter environmental policies on productivity, and the economic and social effects of environmental reforms.
2) It finds that the costs of inaction on climate change are substantial, with global damages estimated to reach 5-9% of GDP by 2100 under a business as usual scenario. Tighter environmental policies also do not necessarily harm productivity when properly designed.
3) The document advocates assessing reforms using macroeconomic models and microsimulation to evaluate their efficiency, environmental effectiveness, and distributional consequences like the impact of fossil fuel subsidy phase outs on household income.
2014.11.28 - NAEC Group Meeting_Adrian Blundell-WignallOECD_NAEC
The document discusses several issues related to finance and the economy. It notes that financial deregulation and innovation led to the 2008 liquidity crisis due to complex derivatives and relationships between counterparties. Since then, derivatives have shifted from banks to shadow banks. There has also been an emerging market bubble in corporate credit as investors seek yield. The document raises concerns about liquidity risks if interest rates rise or demand slows, given the shift away from banks as liquidity providers. It argues that new approaches are needed to encourage long-term, sustainable investment by non-banks.
1) The ECB Governor found conventional economic models provided limited help during the financial crisis as they failed to predict or explain what was happening.
2) He welcomed inspiration from other disciplines like physics, engineering, psychology and biology to develop new tools to improve the robustness of their framework.
3) A multi-disciplinary group at UCL is developing approaches using narratives and emotions extracted from big data sources like news to provide early warnings and better understand economic uncertainties.
The document discusses using numbers and narratives to explore evolutionary potential. It addresses using quantified self data from things like fitness trackers to go beyond conventional text analysis. It also discusses the need for proper sampling, transparency in algorithms, and shifting from linear to nonlinear views of policy and action. The document also examines monitoring networks of micro-narratives, detecting patterns in outcomes, and managing for serendipity.
The document discusses the use of narratives and numbers in climate change science and policymaking. It notes that while climate models provide quantitative projections, there is still significant uncertainty. Narratives are therefore also used to describe potential climate futures in a qualitative way. The "2 degree Celsius" narrative in particular aims to motivate climate action by framing 2C as the maximum safe level of warming. However, it emerged indirectly and its cost-benefit analysis is still debated. The document argues that to best inform policymaking, climate projections need to better integrate narratives with socioeconomic factors to assess impacts across scales and sectors. Foresight approaches should combine top-down and bottom-up methods to explore uncertain long-term issues like climate change.
This document summarizes Shell's process for developing qualitative scenarios to model energy demand and futures. It discusses how Shell uses scenarios to test strategies, identify opportunities and threats, and make risky decisions more transparent. Scenarios are developed through analyzing interactions between politics, environment, technology, society and economics. They must be plausible, internally consistent, challenging and have consequences. Shell's scenario methodology includes understanding key uncertainties and developing quantitative models to underpin qualitative storylines about different potential futures.
This document discusses how ancient Greeks navigated uncertainty through oracles and narratives. It explores how oracles did not make predictions, but offered alternative stories that allowed people to create meaning and motivation. By generating potential stories for the future, oracles helped ancient Greeks navigate risk and make decisions. The document presents examples of oracle sites in Greece, the types of questions Greeks asked oracles, and images that help illustrate oracle practices.
The document discusses trends in currency-based measures taken by countries between 2005-2013. It finds that:
1) Emerging market economies had more currency-based measures in place in 2005, with limits on bank's net foreign exchange positions being most common.
2) From 2005-2013, countries eased currency-based measures leading up to the financial crisis, while tightening them more after 2008. Tightening focused on restricting foreign currency inflows and outflows through banks.
3) A few OECD countries actively increased restrictions over the period, while non-OECD economies liberalized significantly through adjustments to existing measures.
This document summarizes a seminar discussing the effects of growth-enhancing policies on microeconomic stability. It finds that while some pro-growth reforms can increase instability at the individual level, deeper reforms may boost growth without increasing volatility. Reforms like reducing employment protections and unemployment benefits can increase worker reallocation and earnings volatility, while well-designed social programs and competitive markets can attenuate these impacts. Policy settings are linked to a country's distance from the growth-volatility frontier, showing the importance of balancing economic goals.
This document summarizes a study on the effects of growth-enhancing policies on microeconomic stability. The study finds that policies promoting growth, such as reducing employment protection and product market regulation, can increase microeconomic instability for firms, workers, and households. However, deeper reforms may boost growth without raising instability. The analysis also shows that tax-benefit systems play a key role in attenuating the impact of individual income volatility on overall household income changes. While some pro-growth reforms have trade-offs with stability and inequality, well-designed policies, like expanding active labor market programs, can promote both growth and stability.
This document summarizes a presentation given at an OECD seminar on skills distribution, wage inequality, and social inequality. The presentation analyzed data from the OECD Survey of Adult Skills to examine the relationship between the distribution of numeracy skills across countries and wage inequality. It found that countries with a more unequal distribution of numeracy skills, such as the US and France, tended to have higher wage inequality. Differences in how skills and education are rewarded in the labor market, rather than differences in average skill levels, accounted for 30-90% of the variation in wage inequality between countries.
2014.10.10 - NAEC Seminar_Identifying Social and Emotional SkillsOECD_NAEC
The document discusses the role of social and emotional skills in human capital development and social progress. It argues that developing social and emotional skills in children is an important yet underutilized means of addressing socio-economic challenges. Evidence shows that social and emotional skills can significantly impact education, employment, health and other outcomes. The OECD can help by developing tools to reliably measure these skills and conducting policy analysis to inform national strategies.
This document outlines New Zealand's approach to national security which focuses on building resilience through a systems approach. It emphasizes managing risks, reducing vulnerabilities, and building resilience within the same framework. Recent crises in New Zealand like earthquakes and industrial accidents highlighted the importance of this approach and lessons around strengthening infrastructure, community support, and adaptive emergency management.
This document discusses how to make wise decisions in an uncertain global environment prone to surprises and shocks. It recommends building resilience by identifying sources of strength, conducting stress tests of policies, and choosing options that increase diversity, adaptability, decentralization, and connections while avoiding long-term commitments or reliance on single predictions. An example portfolio of resilience-building measures for Finland is provided, ranging from investment in trade partnerships to innovation for difficult economic periods. The goal is to develop a subset of actions that increase the ability to succeed across a variety of potential situations.
Governments face novel risks from increased shock events like disasters and crises in complex interconnected systems. Boosting resilience is important to minimize welfare losses. Resilience requires anticipating shocks, adapting, and learning. Major shocks can cause economic losses exceeding 20% of GDP with impacts propagating across sectors and borders. The OECD recommends a holistic risk governance approach integrating prevention, crisis management, and continual improvement to strengthen resilience at all levels.
2014.09.22 - NAEC Seminar_Origins of the crisisOECD_NAEC
The document analyzes the determinants of the financial crisis, identifying three key factors: 1) Low interest rates increased the supply of credit. 2) Rising income inequality and growth of institutional investors increased demand for mortgages and securitized bonds. 3) The rise of shadow banking and enabling factors allowed risks to accumulate in the financial system.
2014_09_19_NAEC Seminar_How good is your jobOECD_NAEC
The document discusses new approaches to measuring and assessing job quality. It proposes a framework that defines three key dimensions of job quality - earnings quality, labor market security, and quality of the working environment. It presents indicators to measure each dimension and compares job quality outcomes across OECD countries and socioeconomic groups. The framework aims to allow a more comprehensive assessment of labor market performance and the role of policies in determining job quality outcomes. Future work will expand the analysis to more countries and take a more dynamic perspective on career prospects.
2014.05.23 - NAEC Invitation_Dynamism, Rivalry and the Surplus Economy
1. NEW APPROACHES TO ECONOMIC CHALLENGES
We are pleased to invite you to a seminar by
János Kornai
Harvard University and Corvinus University of Budapest
DYNAMISM, RIVALRY AND
THE SURPLUS ECONOMY
Friday 23 May 2014, 2.00 pm - 3.30 pm
CC9, OECD Headquarters
Please register on EMS or R.S.V.P. to naec@oecd.org
For more information please visit http://www.oecd.org/naec/seminars.htm
Janos Kornai will present his book and
more recent research:
In Dynamism, Rivalry,
and the Surplus Economy,
János Kornai examines
capitalism as an
economic system and in
comparison to socialism.
Kornai explains his
view of capitalism as an
economy of surplus - a
chronic excess of supply
of goods and labor. This
environment breeds
rivalry among producers,
which in turn encourages innovation. Socialism,
on the other hand, is defined by a shortage of goods
and labor and excess of demand. Whereas socialism
is slothful and imitative, capitalism is dynamic and
progressive. The two essays of this book will explore
these differing ideologies on macro and micro levels,
ending with definitive explanations of how the systems
work and how they develop.
For more information: www.kornai-janos.hu
Français au dos
2. NOUVELLES APPROCHES FACE AUX DEFIS ECONOMIQUES
Nous sommes heureux de vous inviter à un séminaire présenté par
János Kornai
Université de Harvard et Université Corvinus de Budapest
DYNAMISME, RIVALITE ET
ECONOMIE DU SURPLUS
Vendredi 23 mai 2014, 14h00 - 15h30
CC9, Centre de Conférence de l’OCDE
Inscriptions sur EMS ou R.S.V.P. à naec@oecd.org
Pour plus d’informations : http://www.oecd.org/naec/seminars.htm
Janos Kornai présentera son livre
et des recherches plus récentes :
Dans son ouvrage
Dynamisme, Rivalité et
Economie du surplus,
János Kornai examine le
capitalisme en tant que
système économique
et le compare au
socialisme. Kornai y
explique sa vision du
capitalisme qu’il voit
comme une économie
du surplus, c’est-à-
dire une économonie
d’excès chronique d’offre de biens et de main-d’œuvre.
Cet environnement engendre la rivalité entre les
producteurs, ce qui en retour encourage l’innovation.
Le socialisme est défini comme une pénurie de biens
et de travail et d’excès de la demande. Alors que le
socialisme est paresseux et imitatif, le capitalisme
est quant à lui dynamique et progressiste. Les deux
essais de ce livre explorent ces différentes idéologies
sur les niveaux macro et micro, et concluent par des
explications définitives sur la façon dont les systèmes
fonctionnent et comment ils se développent.
Pour plus d’informations : www.kornai-janos.hu
English Overleaf