Topic
Spillover effect
About: Spillover effect is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 7869 publications have been published within this topic receiving 167367 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
TL;DR: In this article, a meta-analysis was conducted to identify the relationship between natural resources abundance and economic growth in China to provide policy guidance for sustainable development, which showed that the existence of the resource curse is ambiguous.
55 citations
••
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined how carbon dioxide emissions respond to changes in the tourism development and found that tourism has a positive direct effect and a negative indirect effect; both are significant at the 1% level.
55 citations
••
TL;DR: In this paper, a three-region input-output model was applied to analyze the emission spillover-feedback effects across the eastern, middle, and western regions of China, which revealed that the interregional trade has important spillover effects (SEs) on the emissions of each region, particularly in the middle-and western regions, but the feedback effects are few.
55 citations
•
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the fundamental causes of widening inland-coastal inequality in China during the post-reform period 1978-2004 within a systematic framework of economic development theory and highlighted the roles of three policy variables, namely globalization, decentralization and marketization, in determining the income gap between the inland and coastal regions.
Abstract: This paper investigates the fundamental causes of the widening inland–coastal inequality in China during the post-reform period 1978–2004 within a systematic framework of economic development theory. We highlight the roles of three policy variables, namely globalization, decentralization and marketization, in determining the income gap between the inland and coastal regions. The results derived from both time-series and panel data provide strong evidence that these policies are thus far inequality-enhancing. This finding is robust to the use of different estimation methods, alternative proxies for policy variables and regional income, as well as the inclusion of other controls. We also find significant but economically small spillover effects from the coastal to inland provinces. Our results suggest that more efforts should be made to improve the policies to reduce regional inequality in China.
55 citations
••
TL;DR: This article found that work-to-family spillover effects tended to be stronger in the North American sample, whereas family-tofamily spill-over effects were weaker in the Chinese sample.
Abstract: Models of the work-to-family and family-to-work interface were tested in two heterogeneous samples of workers, one from North America (N = 408) and one from China (N = 442), using the same measures translated from English to Chinese using back translation. Consistent with proposed differences in the centrality of work and family, tolerance of work demands, and the availability of family support, work-to-family spillover effects tended to be stronger in the North American sample, whereas family-to-work spillover effects tended to be stronger in the Chinese sample. However, some inconsistencies across cultures did not conform to this generalization. Results point to asymmetric differences between North America and China in the work–family interface. Theoretical implications for resource scarcity and expansionist perspectives are discussed, as well as those for the applicability of work–family interventions across North America and China.
55 citations