71,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
payback
36 °P sammeln
  • Format: PDF

With the aim of providing a comprehensive analysis of institutions, and of the global economy more generally, this volume explores systems of institutions and the effect of corruption, developments in behavioural economics, the impact of immigration, and the links between democratic progress and economic growth.

Produktbeschreibung
With the aim of providing a comprehensive analysis of institutions, and of the global economy more generally, this volume explores systems of institutions and the effect of corruption, developments in behavioural economics, the impact of immigration, and the links between democratic progress and economic growth.
Autorenporträt
LUIS ANDRES World Bank, Washington DC, USA STEVE BOUCHER University of California, Davis, USA ALESSANDRA CASARICO Università Bocconi, Milan, Italy CARLO DEVILLANOVA Università Bocconi, Milan, Italy C. SIMON FAN Lingnan University, China JOSE LUIS GUASCH World Bank, Washington DC, USA RICHARD GREEN University of Southampton, UK JÁNOS KORNAI Harvard University, USA, Central European University and Collegium, Budapest, Hungary JANA KUNICOVÁ California Institute of Technology, USA LÁSZLÓ MÁTYÁS University of Budapest, Hungary CLAUDE MÉNARD Université de Paris, Panthéon Sorbonne, France MUSTAPHA NABLI World Bank, Washington DC, USA KLARA SABIRIANOVA PETER Georgia State University, USA GÉRARD ROLAND University of California, Berkeley, USA SUSAN ROSE-ACKERMAN Yale University, USA CARLOS SILVA-JÁUREGUI World Bank, Washington DC, USA ODED STARK University of Klagenfurt, Austria; University of Bonn, Germany; Warsaw University, Poland; ESRC, Cologne, Germany STEPHANE STRAUB World Bank, Washington DC, USA JAN SVEJNAR University of Michigan, USA SILKE UEBELMESSER University of Munich, Germany EVGENY YAKOVLEV Centre for Economic, Financial and International Research, Moscow, Russian Federation EKATERINA ZHURAVSKAYA Centre for Economic, Financial and International Research, Moscow, Russian Federation; Centre for Economic Policy Research, UK