Littérature scientifique sur le sujet « Effets du commerce régional »
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Articles de revues sur le sujet "Effets du commerce régional"
Disdier, Anne-Célia, et Jean-Louis Mucchielli. « Effets frontières et commerce régional : l'exemple des Balkans ». Mondes en développement N° 115-116, no 3 (2001) : 63. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/med.115.0063.
Texte intégralGiraud, Georges. « Les PME dans le commerce extérieur français : d'une proximité régionale à une proximité de délai ». Revue internationale P.M.E. 4, no 2 (16 février 2012) : 113–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1008065ar.
Texte intégralAvom, Désiré. « Les déterminants des échanges dans la CEMAC : une évaluation empirique ». Économie appliquée 58, no 2 (2005) : 127–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ecoap.2005.3756.
Texte intégralGreer, Allan. « Fur‑Trade Labour and Lower Canadian Agrarian Structures ». Historical Papers 16, no 1 (26 avril 2006) : 197–214. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/030875ar.
Texte intégralChase, Jeanne. « L'organisation de l'espace économique dans le nordest des États-Unis après la guerre d'Indépendance ». Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales 43, no 4 (août 1988) : 997–1020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ahess.1988.283536.
Texte intégralTessier, Marc. « Le conflit Canada-Brésil sur l'exportation d'aéronefs de transport régional : analyse des récentes décisions de l'Organisation mondiale du commerce (OMC) ». Les Cahiers de droit 42, no 1 (12 avril 2005) : 3–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/043629ar.
Texte intégralBélanger, Pierre-A. « Les structures d'animation et de consultation aux Îles-de-la-Madeleine ». Articles 11, no 3 (12 avril 2005) : 327–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/055506ar.
Texte intégralBrunner, Thomas, Émilie Mineo, Jean-François Nieus et Bart Verroken. « L’apparition du chirographe échevinal dans le nord de la France. Autour du plus ancien original tournaisien conservé (1218) ». Bulletin de la Commission royale d'histoire. Académie royale de Belgique 188, no 1 (2022) : 55–109. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/bcrh.2022.4425.
Texte intégralWade, Geoff. « Engaging the South : Ming China and Southeast Asia in the Fifteenth Century ». Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 51, no 4 (2008) : 578–638. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156852008x354643.
Texte intégralBouëdron, Élise, Hubert Cochet et Paul Belchi. « Effets et limites du commerce équitable Fairtrade sur les producteurs de café arabica d’une région de piémont andin, au Pérou ». Revue internationale des études du développement N°240, no 4 (2019) : 147. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/ried.240.0147.
Texte intégralThèses sur le sujet "Effets du commerce régional"
Disdier, Anne-Célia. « Effets frontières, échanges internationaux et intégration régionale ». Paris 1, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003PA010047.
Texte intégralPark, Kyung-Suk. « Effets de l'intégration économique régionale sur la croissance : le cas de l'Union européenne ». Paris 1, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1998PA010049.
Texte intégralZaouk, Rassem el. « Les effets de la rente pétrolière sur les économies des pays du Golfe arabo-persique (1972-1992) ». Paris, Institut d'études politiques, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1992IEPP0028.
Texte intégralThe purpose of this thesis is to analyse both the nature and the consequences of the allocation of oil revenues in the eight economies of the Persian Gulf (Bahrain, Iraq, Iran, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates) during the past twenty years (1972-1992). The analysis is donc within a framework which takes into account all the quantitative and qualitative distributions of oil wealth in each one of the eight countries and in the region as whole (petrodollars third world aid, banking sector, economic policies, financial investments and "diversification") allowing also for the study of the impacts of the multiple gulf economical, financial and political crisis on the oil revenues and hence on the economic development of this region. The ultimate goal is to be able to appreciate to what extent has oil wealth been translated into real economic growth
Boitier, Vincent. « Effets de congestion dans la localisation des travailleurs et des exportations ». Thesis, Paris 1, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015PA010003.
Texte intégralThe present thesis aims to expIain three significant phenomena : urban sprawl, unemployment dispersion and hierarchy of trade. In the first chapter, I construct and calibrate a simple search and matching model in which the residential density of workers is endogenous. Using this new framework, I demonstrate that labor market structure generates significant urban sprawl. l identify the fact that firms compensate workers for their spatial costs as the major cause of this large inefficiency. Finally, l underline that optimality can be restored if the government implements an employee commuterbenefit program. The second chapter questions the fact that although it has been well-advocated that cities are characterized by unemployment dispersion, extreme segregated models remain the workhorse of urban labor economics, show that the standard model of this literature comes to terms with unemployment dispersion if workers have neighborhood composition preferences. ln the third chapter joined with Antoine Vatan, we reveal that the fact that firms obey a hierarchy of trade strongly depends on their experience as exporters. We then develop a simple dynamic model that features the evidence outlined above. Namely, we demonstrate that the new empirical results can be explained by a baseline trade-off between attractiveness and competition that is present in any mode! with monopolistic competition and sequential exporting
Menez, Lisa. « Effets des processus d’intégration commerciale et technologique sur les bénéfices à l’agglomération : le cas européen ». Thesis, Université Côte d'Azur, 2020. http://www.theses.fr/2020COAZ0008.
Texte intégralBroadly, the economic literature supports the idea that deepening regional economic integration benefits all trade partners. However, opposite insights have shade light on the increasing needs for a deeper analysis of the heterogenous effects of economic integration processes upon territories. In particular, areas of economic integration such as the European Union have kept on enlarging while some elements tend to emphasize unequal gains from one region to another. The object of this dissertation has been to bring in new elements on these issues by discriminating between two different forms of integration, namely, distinguishing a commercial form of integration from a technological form of integration. We investigate the respective impacts of both types of integration on agglomeration outcomes and welfare distribution across regions. The first chapter lays the problem at the core of this work looking at the entrenchment of spatial inequalities. Using statistical methods from the spatial analysis toolbox, it brings to light diverging dynamics between regions of European Union (EU-28) member states over the period 2000-2016. As a first working hypothesis, we aimed also at evaluating the impact of both commercial and technological forms of integration on regional welfares. We exploit the autocorrelation phenomenon conveyed by those networks to quantify their explanatory share regarding regional GDPs. Our first results fail at enhancing a powerful relationship linking those elements but interestingly we emphasize a negative correlation between both forms of integration over space. The second chapter investigates the origins of the growth slowdown for regions from the Old Europe that particularly suffered during the last phases of EU integration. In this chapter we make use of recent methods using enhancements at the frontier between Common Correlated Effects models (that root back to Common Factors models) and spatial econometrics. Our results give credit to the hypothesis of over-investment in R&D across those territories. Recent theoretical elements support our results in showing that over-investment in R&D could pair with under-growth paths that is lower than optimal growth levels. The third chapter reviews the literature that study the determinants of the gains from trade. The New Economic Geography (NEG) models first designated the lowering of trade costs as a major determinant to agglomeration processes and welfare outcomes. The next generation of New Economic Geography and Growth (NEGG) models introduced the distinction between commercial and technological integrations and allowed to consider impacts that would differ. Recent theoretical advances on this front reached testable implications regarding the relationship between various forms of integration and agglomeration outcomes. Lastly, a new generation of Quantitative Spatial models (QSM) emphasizes the importance of labor mobility, besides capital mobility, as a vector of technological integration between territories and brings in new tools to quantify the spatially uneven impact of economic integration on welfare. The last chapter pushes further some testable implications of NEGG models. It specifies a relationship between the evolution of agglomeration processes of economic activities across regions and the commercial and technological ties that link regions to their neighbors in a common integration zone. The relationship is tested on regions belonging to the EU-28 over the recent period. We take care of endogeneity issues using tools also combining requirements on the control of spatial autocorrelation issues and nonparametric features. Our main results go along the theoretical statement that oppose the effect of commercial integration that favor spatial agglomeration to the effect of technological integration that temper agglomeration dynamics
Assane, Dagna Moumouni. « Les effets de la réappropriation de la culture du « Violet de Galmi » par les producteurs d’oignon de la région de Tahoua, sur la dynamique du territoire local, l'organisation sociale et économique ». Toulouse 2, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006TOU20098.
Texte intégralThis thesis studies the relation of cause and effect which exists between the valorization of a local resource by the introduction of a technical innovation and the local development. This study, based on the case of Violet de Galmi, local resource of the area of Tahoua and resulting from a technical innovation, allowed us to show that the improvement of the purchasing power of the onion producers, which rise from the valorization of their local resource, generated changes which are of two types: Fisrtly some changes entering within the framework of the characteristics values of development, such that evolution of the food practices, the access to the care of health, the education of children, the total improvement of the framework of life, the participation in local governorship etc. And additional religious and économic changes related to the sociocultural representations and entering within the framework of symbolic investments, such as the aspiration at the tradesman statute , the repetition of the pilgrimage in Mecque and propensity to multiply the number of wives. The lessons that we draw of, enabled us to propose a framework of analysis or operational step of the local development theory
Almonord, Jean Sergo. « Haïti et la CARICOM : essais sur les limites et le potentiel de l'intégration économique ». Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université de Lille (2022-....), 2024. https://pepite-depot.univ-lille.fr/ToutIDP/EDSESAM/2024/2024ULILA007.pdf.
Texte intégralAfter an extensive introduction on Haiti and CARICOM, this thesis comprises three essays in international economics aimed at shedding light on the issues and potential of the country and the region.The first essay is a critical discussion of David Ricardo's classical theory of comparative advantage, examining the role of income disparities in international trade. By breaking free from the commonly adopted restrictive assumption of "homothetic preferences," which pos-its that households allocate a constant fraction of their income to the purchase of each good or service they consume, the significance of demand (and thus of income distribution) in explaining trade flows is reaffirmed. A simple model demonstrates that a low-income coun-try can be excluded from trade despite its comparative advantages, even in the absence of trade barriers such as tariffs or transportation costs.Countries still dominated by subsistence agriculture tend to have a low level of openness because most of their production is consumed locally, and foreign-produced consumer goods remain inaccessible to them. In contrast, countries specializing in tourism services tend to have a high level of openness because they export these services to finance the importation of much of their food and consumer goods, which are not locally produced. In summary, re-gardless of their size, the level of economic openness of low-income countries depends largely on their specialization.Another crucial implication of the model is that only the wealthiest countries can truly bene-fit from the advantages of international trade. Trade appears as a driver of divergence rather than convergence because, in some cases, it tends to exacerbate inequalities between nations. Some countries benefit from global growth while others, despite their geographical proximi-ty, seem to drift away irreversibly.The second essay underscores the vulnerabilities arising from the tourism specialization of many Caribbean countries. Although this specialization has allowed them to benefit from the growth of wealthy countries, it also exposes them to all shocks that may affect this sector. The Covid-19 pandemic tragically revealed this fragility, as evidenced by the clear decline in GDP directly related to the importance of tourism in each of these countries. Caribbean economies were directly affected by travel restrictions imposed by tourists' countries of origin, without having a say. Thus, in addition to the fragility inherently linked to specializa-tion, these countries found themselves largely deprived of their sovereignty in economic pol-icy matters, which is particularly problematic when there is a divergence of interest.The third essay explores a potential avenue for Haiti's development. Despite CARICOM's stated intentions, intra-community trade remains very limited, and the expected benefits of the Chaguaramas agreements have yet to materialize. Caribbean countries have few com-plementarities and could be nothing more than competing tourist destinations without con-nections if they did not benefit from the visibility provided by belonging to the Caribbean community at the international level. We argue that Haitian craftsmanship could enrich the region's tourism industry. Haiti has a clear comparative advantage in this field due to its abundant workforce compared to other countries in the region. It could thus benefit from the successful tourism industry of its neighbors, as these countries have every interest in promot-ing a more cultural, profitable, and sustainable form of tourism than mass tourism
Guèye, Moustapha. « Le commerce régional du Sénégal (1900-1997) ». Paris 1, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003PA010572.
Texte intégralBauer, Rodolphe. « La modélisation du volume des compartiments riches en composés chimiques extractibles (écorce et nœud) dans six essences d'intérêt des régions Grand-Est et Bourgogne Franche-Comté ». Electronic Thesis or Diss., Paris, AgroParisTech, 2021. http://www.theses.fr/2021AGPT0025.
Texte intégralIn a context of renewal of the chemical industry and the search for new outlets for forestry, extractives are becoming increasingly interesting molecules, both ecologically and financially speaking. In order to evaluate the relevance of these molecules as a new resource for the chemical industry and a potential outlet for forestry, it is necessary to make a preliminary evaluation of the resource. This requires knowledge of the volume of compartments rich in extractable material, particularly bark and knots. The present study therefore focuses on modeling bark and knot volumes. It focuses specifically on two French regions, the Grand Est and the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, and on six important species, Abies alba, Picea abies, Pseudotsuga menziesii, Quercu robur, Quercus patraea, and Fagus sylvatica.This study is made possible, on one hand, by the use of a large database including numerous measurements of bark thickness made at different heights on the stems of many trees. On the other hand, new samplings have been made to allow X-ray scanning of nodes all along the stem and thus to determine precisely the volume on a computer picture.In order to model the available amount of bark, three types of models were built, models predicting the volume of bark, models predicting the surface area of bark along the stem and models predicting the thickness of bark at 1m30. The former achieved a relative root mean square error (RMSErel) of 16.7% to 27.5% depending on the species.The study of bark area models showed that it was possible to use a model independent of diameter-over-bark but that model using this variable are more accurate. The RMSErel achieved by these bark area models varied between 23 and 38% depending on the species and model considered.This work showed the importance of using the bark thickness at 1m30 as an input data. As it is rarely measured today, it was also modelled using the DBH. This allowed us to show the influence of altitude on bark thickness at 1.30 m for three species: Abies alba, Picea abies, Fagus sylvatica. The models obtained RMSErel of the models ranged from 26.8 to 36 % of RMSErel depending on the species considered.Finally, knot volumes have started to be studied. Although this work has not been fully completed, it already shows the importance of producing new models in order to fit the predicted knot patterns as closely as possible to reality. Moreover, the quantity of these compounds in the wood seems, at this stage of the study, to be too small to provide a large extractable resource, despite their great intrinsic richness. Their interest could therefore be more in the extraction of specific molecules
Asghari, Poudeh Maryam. « Analyse des effets de la libéralisation des échanges économiques internationaux sur l'environnement : le cas des relations entre les blocs régionaux de l'UE, des pays Mediterranées (sic) en développement et du golfe persique ». Nice, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009NICE0008.
Texte intégralThe linkage between international trade and the environment has become an important policy issue in the last few years. The objective of this thesis is the examination of liberalization trade effect on the environment, pollution haven hypothesis, Porter hypothesis and the factor endowments hypothesis. Our results show that: The commercial liberalization leads to the decrease in CO2 pollution in Persian Golf-EU region, Mediterranean and EU regions, as well as BOD pollution in Persian golf, Mediterranean and Persian Golf-EU regions. Also it decreases FC pollution in Persian Golf region, Mediterranean, Persian Golf-EU and EU-Mediterranean regions. Commercial liberalization increase the CO2 pollution in Persian Golf region and EU-Mediterranean regions, it leads also the increase in BOD pollution in EU and Persian Golf-EU regions, and FC pollution in EU region. Our results confirm the “Haven pollution hypothesis” for the CO2 pollution in the foreign exchanges of Persian Golf-EU and EU-Mediterranean regions, and for FC pollution in in the foreign exchanges of Persian Golf-EU region but our results reject the “Haven pollution hypothesis” for BOD pollution in the foreign exchanges of Persian Golf-EU region. We have not any robust empirical evidences to refuse or confirm this hypothesis for BOD and FC pollution in the foreign exchanges of EU-Mediterranean region. We empirically reject the « Porter hypothesis » for CO2 pollution in the foreign exchanges of Mediterranean-EU, Persian Golf-EU, Mediterranean and EU regions, as well as BOD pollution in the foreign exchanges of Persian Golf region. This study confirms the « Porter hypothesis » for FC pollution in the foreign exchanges of Mediterranean-EU, Persian Golf-EU, EU and Mediterranean regions. In addition, it confirms this hypothesis for BOD pollution in the foreign exchanges of Mediterranean-EU, EU and Mediterranean regions. We couldn’t obtain significant results to confirm or reject Porter Hypothesis for BOD pollution in the foreign exchanges of Persian Golf-EU region and for FC pollution in the foreign exchanges of Persian Golf region. Our results show the confirmation of « factor endowments hypothesis» for CO2 pollution in EU region and for FC pollution in Mediterranean region. Moreover we confirm this hypothesis for BOD pollution in Mediterranean and Persian Golf regions. The empirical results refuse «factor endowments hypothesis» for CO2 pollution in Mediterranean and Persian Golf regions, for BOD pollution in EU region and for FC pollution in Persian Golf and EU regions
Livres sur le sujet "Effets du commerce régional"
R, Baldwin John. Volatilité de l'emploi au niveau régional dans le secteur canadien de la fabrication : Les effets de la spécialisation et du commerce. Ottawa : Statistique Canada, Direction des études analytiques, 2002.
Trouver le texte intégralGuèye, Moustapha. Le commerce régional du Sénégal (1900-1997). Lille : Atelier national de reproduction des thèses, 2003.
Trouver le texte intégral(Organization), ENDA, dir. Le futur du commerce intra-régional en Afrique de l'Ouest. Dakar : Enda tiers-monde, 2010.
Trouver le texte intégralChaput, Yves. Effets de commerce, chèques et instruments de paiement. 2e éd. Paris : Presses universitaires de France, 1998.
Trouver le texte intégralKnani, Youssef. Droit commercial : Les effets de commerce et le chèque. Tunis : Centre d'études, de recherches et de publication de l'Université de droit, d'économie et de gestion de Tunis (Tunis III), 1988.
Trouver le texte intégralMimouni, Najate. Le commerce de gros à Fès et son rôle dans l'organisation de l'espace régional. Lille : A.N.R.T. Université de Lille III, 1989.
Trouver le texte intégralDupichot, Jacques. Les effets de commerce : Lettre de change, billet à ordre, chèque. 3e éd. Paris : Montchrestien, 1996.
Trouver le texte intégralIsaoui, Abdellatif El. Le commerce et les transports dans l'organisation de l'espace régional des chiadma et des Haha (Maroc). Lille : A.N.R.T, Université de Lille III, 1997.
Trouver le texte intégralSpeidel, Richard E. Payment systems : Teaching materials. 5e éd. St. Paul, Minn : West Pub. Co., 1993.
Trouver le texte intégralGhellinck, Elisabeth de. Effets de l'ouverture sur les structures et performances d'une petite économie : Le cas de la Belgique. [Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium] : CIACO, 1986.
Trouver le texte intégralChapitres de livres sur le sujet "Effets du commerce régional"
Baruch, Philippe, Nelly Kerscaven, Gérard Melyon, Rémédios Noguera, Isabelle Andernack et Dominique Namur. « Chapitre 18. Effets de commerce ». Dans Comptabilité générale, 215–32. Vuibert, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/vuib.ander.2018.01.0215.
Texte intégralde Bernardy, Michel. « Centres de R&D et compétitivité des firmes : avantages spécifiques et effets réciproques, l'exemple de Grenoble ». Dans Recherche et développement régional, 195–212. Éditions de la Sorbonne, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.psorbonne.37140.
Texte intégral« Structure des échanges aux niveaux mondial et régional ». Dans Examen Statistique du Commerce Mondial 2017, 46–59. WTO, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.30875/039a0447-fr.
Texte intégralPagès, Naïma. « 24. Effets d’agglomération et développement régional en Afrique de l’Ouest ». Dans Hommes et sociétés, 531–54. Karthala, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/kart.gemd.2005.01.0531.
Texte intégralBourgain, Arnaud, Maurice Catin et Patrice Pieretti. « Chapitre 12. Pôle financier et croissance régionale : les effets externes des activités bancaires sur l'économie luxembourgeoise ». Dans Services aux entreprises et développement régional, 341. De Boeck Supérieur, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/dbu.gallo.2006.01.0341.
Texte intégral« Effets sur l’emploi d’un rééquilibragede l’économie mondiale ». Dans Rapport sur le commerce et le développement, 39–76. UN, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.18356/2025cd4c-fr.
Texte intégral« LA LIBÉRALISATION DES ÉCHANGES DE SERVICES ET SES EFFETS APPRÉHENDÉS ». Dans Le commerce international, 4e édition, 887–926. Presses de l'Université du Québec, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv18ph0fb.24.
Texte intégral« Financement du développement régional : progrès accomplis et difficultés rencontrées ». Dans Rapport sur le commerce et le développement 2022, 173–205. United Nations, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.18356/9789210021630c007.
Texte intégralHeffer, Jean. « Chapitre 6. Les effets de l’industrialisation ». Dans Le port de New York et le commerce extérieur américain, 131–55. Éditions de la Sorbonne, 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.psorbonne.52813.
Texte intégral« Effets et facilité d’adoption des technologies avancées ». Dans Le rôle des technologies avancées dans le commerce transfrontières, 46–49. WTO, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.30875/9789287073624c006.
Texte intégralRapports d'organisations sur le sujet "Effets du commerce régional"
Derrick, Fossong, et Ashu Mc Moi Ndi. Politique fiscale numérique et collecte des recettes fiscales au Cameroun. Institute of Development Studies, novembre 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/ictd.2024.091.
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