| 41.- |
|
|
| 42.- |
|
|
| 43.- |
|
|
| 44.- |
|
|
| 45.- |
|
|
| 46.- |
|
|
| 47.- |
|
|
| 48.- |
|
|
| 49.- |
|
|
| 50.- |
|
|
| 51.- |
|
|
| 52.- |
|
|
| 53.- |
|
|
| 54.- |
|
|
| 55.- |
|
|
| 56.- |
|
|
| 57.- |
|
|
| 58.- |
|
|
| 59.- |
Transference costs and intersectoral mobility: explaining income differentials affecting the agricultural sector
López, R.E1; Figueroa, E2
1Universidad de Chile, Facultad de Economía, Santiago de Chile. Chile; 2University of Maryland, Department of Agricultural Resource Economics, College Park, Maryland. Estados Unidos de América
[ Estudios de economía, Chile, 1994 Vol. 21 Núm. 2 Dic, Pág. 257-276]
|
|
| 60.- |
Transversality conditions in optimum growth models with or without discounting: a unified view
Mitra, T1; Dasgupta, S2
1Dalhousie University, Dept Economics, Halifax, Nova Scotia. Canadá; 2Cornell University, Dept Economics, Ithaca, Nueva York. Estados Unidos de América
[ Estudios de economía, Chile, 1994 Vol. 21 Núm. 2 Dic, Pág. 301-311]
|
|