Country Characteristics (country + characteristic)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Economic and cultural correlates of cannabis use among mid-adolescents in 31 countries

ADDICTION, Issue 2 2006
Tom Ter Bogt
ABSTRACT Aims To examine cannabis use among mid-adolescents in 31 countries and associations with per-capita personal consumer expenditure (PCE), unemployment, peer factors and national rates of cannabis use in 1999. Design, participants and measurement Nationally representative, self-report, classroom survey with 22 223 male and 24 900 female 15-year-olds. Country characteristics were derived from publicly available economic databases and previously conducted cross-national surveys on substance use. Findings Cannabis use appears to be normative among mid-adolescents in North America and several countries in Europe. The life-time prevalence of cannabis use was 26% among males and 15% among females and was lowest for males and females in the former Yugoslav Republic (TFYR) of Macedonia: 2.5% and to 2.5%, respectively; and highest for males in Switzerland (49.1%) and in Greenland for females (47.0%). The highest prevalence of frequent cannabis use (more than 40 times in life-time) was seen in Canada for males (14.2%) and in the United States for females (5.5%). Overall, life-time prevalence and frequent use are associated with PCE, perceived availability of cannabis (peer culture) and the presence of communities of older cannabis users (drug climate). Conclusions As PCE increases, cannabis use may be expected to increase and gender differences decease. Cross-national comparable policy measures should be developed and evaluated to examine which harm reduction strategies are most effective. [source]


Pricing to Market Behavior by Canadian and U.S. Agri-food Exporters: Evidence from Wheat, Pulse and Apples

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS, Issue 2 2003
Richard Carew
A fixed-effects model to control for time variation in marginal costs is employed to pinpoint evidence of price discriminatory behavior of Canadian and U.S. exporters of agri-food products. We test for evidence of pricing to market behavior and whether price discrimination or commodity/country characteristics may provide a plausible explanation. A distinguishing feature of our approach is to examine the time-series properties of the data by the conventional augmented Dickey-Fuller and recently developed panel unit root test. The panel data set employed in this paper consists of annual exchange rates and export prices for three agri-food products (wheat, pulse and apples) exported by Canada and the U.S. in foreign markets during 1980,98. Our fixed-effects model suggests that U.S. exporters are sensitive to exchange rate changes, while Canadian exporters in most cases raised price markups in response to a depreciated currency in overseas markets. The results highlight the differences in pricing policy that both countries employ to merchandise agri-food products in export markets. Les auteurs ont recouru à un modèle à effets fixes pour contrôler la fluctuation des coûts marginaux dans le temps et montrer que les exportateurs canadiens et américains de produits agroalimentaires se comportent différemment dans l'établissement des prix. Ils ont tenté de vérifier si ce comportement varie avec les cours en vigueur sur le marché et essayé d'établir s'il s'explique par une discrimination au niveau des prix ou par les paramètres propres au produit ou au pays. Une particularité de cette approche est qu'elle tient compte des propriétés historiques des données en recourant à la version augmentée du test classique de Dickey Fuller et au tout nouveau test de racine unitaire reposant sur les panels. Le jeu de données recueillies par panel dont les auteurs se sont servis comprend le taux du change annuel et le prix d'exportation de trois produits agroalimentaires (blé, légumineuses à graine et pommes) que le Canada et les États-Unis ont écoulés sur les marchés étrangers entre 1980 et 1998. Le modèle à effets fixes laisse croire que les exportateurs américains sont sensibles au taux du change alors que, dans la plupart des cas, leurs homologues canadiens majorent les prix davantage consécutivement à une dépréciation des devises à l'étranger. Les résultats font ressortir les divergences entre les politiques de fixation des prix qu'emploient les deux pays pour écouler leurs produits agroalimentaires sur les marchés étrangers. [source]


Extreme right-wing voting in Western Europe

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL RESEARCH, Issue 3 2002
Marcel Lubbers
In this study we explain extreme right-wing voting behaviour in the countries of the European Union and Norway from a micro and macro perspective. Using a multidisciplinary multilevel approach, we take into account individual-level social background characteristics and public opinion alongside country characteristics and characteristics of extreme right-wing parties themselves. By making use of large-scale survey data (N = 49,801) together with country-level statistics and expert survey data, we are able to explain extreme right-wing voting behaviour from this multilevel perspective. Our results show that cross-national differences in support of extreme right-wing parties are particularly due to differences in public opinion on immigration and democracy, the number of non-Western residents in a country and, above all, to party characteristics of the extreme right-wing parties themselves. [source]


Nursing shortages and international nurse migration

INTERNATIONAL NURSING REVIEW, Issue 4 2005
S. J. Ross mpa/id
Background:, The United Kingdom and the United States are among several developed countries currently experiencing nursing shortages. While the USA has not yet implemented policies to encourage nurse immigration, nursing shortages will likely result in the growth of foreign nurse immigration to the USA. Understanding the factors that drive the migration of nurses is critical as the USA exerts more pull on the foreign nurse workforce. Aim:, To predict the international migration of nurses to the UK using widely available data on country characteristics. Method:, The Nursing and Midwifery Council serves as the source of data on foreign nurse registrations in the UK between 1998 and 2002. We develop and test a regression model that predicts the number of foreign nurse registrants in the UK based on source country characteristics. We collect country-level data from sources such as the World Bank and the World Health Organization. Results:, The shortage of nurses in the UK has been accompanied by massive and disproportionate growth in the number of foreign nurses from poor countries. Low-income, English-speaking countries that engage in high levels of bilateral trade experience greater losses of nurses to the UK. Conclusion:, Poor countries seeking economic growth through international trade expose themselves to the emigration of skilled labour. This tendency is currently exacerbated by nursing shortages in developed countries. Countries at risk for nurse emigration should adjust health sector planning to account for expected losses in personnel. Moreover, policy makers in host countries should address the impact of recruitment on source country health service delivery. [source]


Market Size and the Survival of Foreign-owned Firms,

THE ECONOMIC RECORD, Issue 2007
ROD FALVEY
We develop a general equilibrium model with heterogeneous firms and foreign direct investment cost uncertainty and investigate the survival of foreign-owned firms. The survival probabilities of foreign-owned firms depend on firm-level characteristics, such as productivity, and host country characteristics, such as market size. We show that a foreign-owned firm will be less likely to be shut down when its parent firm's productivity is higher and its indigenous competitors are less productive. Although a larger market size will always reduce the survival probability of indigenous firms, it can lead to a higher survival probability for foreign-owned firms if their parent firms are sufficiently productive. [source]