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Research Topic : time use
Field of Research : Applied Economics
Australian State/Territory : ACT
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  • Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP0666721

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $166,000.00
    Summary
    A New Economic History of Australia. Australia is at a cross-roads. After almost a century of protectionism we have globally re-integrated and liberalised, as we were when we possessed the world's highest standard of living in the nineteenth century. But we have yet to truly rebuild our capability to compete well in a global knowledge economy and to do so sustainably and justly. It is the presumption of this Project that a new understanding of the role of human investment in our history can hel .... A New Economic History of Australia. Australia is at a cross-roads. After almost a century of protectionism we have globally re-integrated and liberalised, as we were when we possessed the world's highest standard of living in the nineteenth century. But we have yet to truly rebuild our capability to compete well in a global knowledge economy and to do so sustainably and justly. It is the presumption of this Project that a new understanding of the role of human investment in our history can help underpin a clearer understanding of the policy imperatives for our future. The Project will lead to an explicit and detailed policy agenda for re-shaping Australia's future so as to be again a clever country.
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    Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP0556371

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $105,000.00
    Summary
    Securitised Real Estate and Private Dwellings: International and Domestic Linkages and Implications for the Macroeconomy. Cycles in the housing market and its interaction with other economic and financial market variables may have enormous effects on the Australian economy. Despite this there is little research on the interactions between housing and the macroeconomy. This project examines these issues. The implications of the research extend to three broad areas. The first is monetary policy by .... Securitised Real Estate and Private Dwellings: International and Domestic Linkages and Implications for the Macroeconomy. Cycles in the housing market and its interaction with other economic and financial market variables may have enormous effects on the Australian economy. Despite this there is little research on the interactions between housing and the macroeconomy. This project examines these issues. The implications of the research extend to three broad areas. The first is monetary policy by understanding housing prices, inflation and interest rates linkages. Second, constructing formal models including housing may provide a means of testing the implications of policies such as the first home owner grant or reductions in housing specific taxes. Finally, financial markets may benefit by understanding of the role of property in a diversified portfolio.
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    Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP120103443

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $300,000.00
    Summary
    Commodity cycles. The implications of resource demand by emerging markets are issues policy makers need to understand. This project address these by focusing on currency, equity and commodity linkages, the financial market and macroeconomic effects of currency collapse, and the role of emerging markets in mitigating/amplifying economic shock transmission.
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    Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP0665477

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $28,942.00
    Summary
    An economic analysis of local content requirements in radio broadcasting: a model and an empirical investigation of the Australian experience. How much local music should radio stations be required to play? Twenty per cent? Thirty per cent? As much or as little as they wish? Who benefits from such schemes? Local musicians? International record companies? Who is hurt? Radio stations? The listening public? By better understanding the effects of local content quotas on radio broadcasters (an .... An economic analysis of local content requirements in radio broadcasting: a model and an empirical investigation of the Australian experience. How much local music should radio stations be required to play? Twenty per cent? Thirty per cent? As much or as little as they wish? Who benefits from such schemes? Local musicians? International record companies? Who is hurt? Radio stations? The listening public? By better understanding the effects of local content quotas on radio broadcasters (and the ways in which they lead to those effects) and by being aware of the actual consequences of the Australian scheme (and, potentially, those of other countries) we can better answer these sorts of questions. Gaining such understanding is the goal of this research.
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    Funded Activity

    ARC Future Fellowships - Grant ID: FT160100423

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $840,480.00
    Summary
    Computational methods for solving modern asset pricing models. This project aims to solve a broad range of asset pricing models. Movements in asset prices affect private investors, public sector finances, wealth distribution and business activity levels. Economists have tried to build better models of asset prices, moving away from hyper-rationality and towards realistic features including heterogeneity, habit persistence and bounded rationality. These models’ additional complexity makes them di .... Computational methods for solving modern asset pricing models. This project aims to solve a broad range of asset pricing models. Movements in asset prices affect private investors, public sector finances, wealth distribution and business activity levels. Economists have tried to build better models of asset prices, moving away from hyper-rationality and towards realistic features including heterogeneity, habit persistence and bounded rationality. These models’ additional complexity makes them difficult to solve or to apply to real world problems. The project will use modern hardware and computational tools, insights from economics literature and numerical analysis to provide a set of solution methods for such asset pricing models. This is expected to improve policy analysis and decision making under uncertainty.
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    Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP160100756

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $273,000.00
    Summary
    Energy Efficiency Innovation, Diffusion and the Rebound Effect. This project aims to help quantify the net energy saved globally from energy efficiency policies and programs. It aims to investigate the speed at which energy efficiency innovations spread to countries across the world from technologically leading countries and to measure empirically the size of the rebound effect that offsets energy efficiency improvements at the economy-wide level. Governments and international organisations are .... Energy Efficiency Innovation, Diffusion and the Rebound Effect. This project aims to help quantify the net energy saved globally from energy efficiency policies and programs. It aims to investigate the speed at which energy efficiency innovations spread to countries across the world from technologically leading countries and to measure empirically the size of the rebound effect that offsets energy efficiency improvements at the economy-wide level. Governments and international organisations are increasingly looking to energy efficiency policies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and improve energy security, but there is little information on the potential for these policies to actually save energy and, therefore, reduce emissions. Project results may help in the design of cost-effective energy and climate policies.
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