2. Publicaciones
URI permanente para esta comunidadhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12640/4068
Las publicaciones de ESAN reúnen una variedad de materiales académicos y prácticos que abarcan áreas fundamentales como la administración, economía, negocios, entre otros. Con enfoque en la formación y el desarrollo profesional, estas obras buscan contribuir al conocimiento y la innovación en diversas disciplinas; asimismo, proporciona información relevante y actualizada para la comunidad académica y empresarial en el ámbito local e internacional
Examinar
3 resultados
Resultados de la búsqueda
Ítem Solo Metadatos Perú: políticas para cerrar la brecha de la balanza de conocimientos(Universidad ESAN. ESAN Ediciones, 2011-06-30) Roca Tavella, SantiagoIn this paper we show the balance of knowledge deficit in Peru compared to the surplus of its trade balance and the necessity to transform the structure and technological coefficients of exports to close this knowledge gap. We analyze major economic policies that could help in closing the gap, especially industrial and technological innovation policies, rethinking intellectual property rights and impelling the forces that propagate the economic system as a whole. “Openness” and the “good management of macroeconomic fundamentals” are necessary but not sufficient conditions to transform the economy, which for better performance need the strategic “will and wit” of adding value and a better balance between external and national interests.Ítem Solo Metadatos International banking: its role in Florida's economy at the outset of the twenty-first century(Universidad ESAN. ESAN Ediciones, 2001-12-30) Roussakis, Emmanuel; Thomakos, DimitriosOne of the most remarkable economic developments of the 1970s for the State of Florida was its emergence in the international financial world. Florida's economy which until then was essentially relying on tourism agriculture and the construction industry began during the 1970s to gradually acquire a new dimension--international banking. Florida's proximity to Central and South American markets its bilingual population and the promulgation by the state of international banking legislation have all contributed to Miami's emergence--both nationally and internationally--as a specialized Latin American banking center.With international banking a major financial activity its impact is felt throughout the Florida economy. Employment and office expenditures have a direct effect on local income. However the total economic impact of international banking activities on the local economy is even more important when the multiplier effect of all direct and indirect expenditures associated with international banking is factored in. The purpose of this study is to describe the size and composition of international banking activities in Miami and to identify the effects of these activities for Miami-Dade County and more broadly for the Florida economy. To quantify this information a survey was undertaken in February 2000 among banking institutions in Miami-Dade. * Although other financial institutions such as security firms provide international services this survey was limited to commercial banks and Edge Act corporations.Ítem Solo Metadatos Exportaciones del Perú y el APEC desde una perspectiva de la dotación de factores(Universidad ESAN. ESAN Ediciones, 2003-06-30) Ormeño, ArturoBecause of the structural reforms of the first years of the nineties, Peru has managed to reverse the declining trend of exports observed during the second half of the eighties. In addition, in 1998 it has joined APEC, a fact that represents a set of possibilities for the development of the commercial exchange. This article seeks to identify what type of products have benefited from this process of reforms and which will depend, with greater intensity, on the development of current potentialities. Likewise, it is about establishing what productive factors explain these results. To do this, econometric estimations are made, based on a model of the extended Hecksher-Ohlin type, to a sample of APEC countries. The results indicate that although factors such as the stock of capital, the geographical area and the availability of land for cultivation and forestry activity are significant to explain the dynamics of exports, there are others in which the government can directly influence, such as the degree of openness and the educational level of the population.