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Spillover effect

About: Spillover effect is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 7869 publications have been published within this topic receiving 167367 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper analyzed the time-varying volatility and spillover effects in crude oil, heating oil, and natural gas futures markets by incorporating changes in important macroeconomic variables and major political and weather-related events into the conditional variance equations.

100 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the relationship between organizational culture and work-to-home spillover, and found that a supportive culture explained most of the variance in positive work-home interference and strain-based negative work−home interference.
Abstract: For today's managers, striking a sound work−home balance is an important matter. In this paper we investigate the relationship between organizational culture and work-to-home spillover. Two types of organizational culture, supportive and innovative, were compared with regard to work-to-home spillover. We measured work-to-home spillover with the help of positive and negative work−home interference measures: negative work−home interference was divided into strain-based negative work−home interference and time-based negative work−home interference. A total of 418 alumni of two Dutch business schools completed a questionnaire. The data were analysed by means of confirmatory factor analysis and structural equation modelling. Findings showed that a supportive culture explained most of the variance in positive work−home interference and strain-based negative work−home interference. The relationships between a supportive culture and positive and strain-based negative work−home interference were fully mediated by flexible work−home arrangements. Flexible work−home arrangements explained the variance in time-based negative work−home interference, while no relationship was found between supportive culture and time-based negative work−home interference. Innovative culture was positively related to positive work−home interference and time-based negative work−home interference. The outcomes suggest that a supportive culture, expressed in flexible work−home arrangements, can enhance positive spillover from the work domain to the home domain and diminish negative spillover. We suggest that improving the work−home interface may attract and retain valued managers.

99 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper found that labeling those who perceived they performed many pro-environmental behaviors as "environmentalists" led to stronger environmental self-identity with no simultaneous reduction of guilt, increasing the total positive spillover.

99 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of global economic policy uncertainty (EPU) shocks on China's financial conditions index (CFCI) and analyzes the sources of uncertainty shocks were explored.

99 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2000
TL;DR: Based on exploratory spatial data analysis, this article studied the spread effects in Chinese space economy from a core-periphery perspective, and found that the economic spillover effects are most evident at the first order of province contiguity from Guangdong, where the two coastal provinces of Hainan and Guangxi are identified with a significant spread pattern, while non-coastal provinces Hunan and Jiangxi are observed with a strong polarization pattern.
Abstract: Based on recently developed methods of exploratory spatial data analysis, this article seeks to prove the desired spread effects in the Chinese space economy from a core-periphery perspective. Recently developed methods of exploratory spatial data analysis provide new insights on the spatial pattern of the interaction of Chinese provincial output growth rates over the 1978–1994 period. Findings indicate that the economic spillover effects are most evident at the first order of province contiguity from Guangdong, where the two coastal provinces of Hainan and Guangxi are identified with a significant spread pattern, while non-coastal provinces Hunan and Jiangxi are observed with a strong polarization pattern. A further analysis indicates that the state preferential policies favoring the coastal region are the fundamental force in determining the direction of spread-polarization processes in the Chinese space economy. This finding confirms Friedmann's hypothesis on spatial interaction, namely, that the spread process is a successful diffusion of the core's existing institutions into the periphery.

99 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20231,413
20222,440
2021817
2020708
2019612
2018485