Essays about: "Compensation and Productivity"
Showing result 11 - 15 of 20 essays containing the words Compensation and Productivity.
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11. Comparative economic value estimation of matsutake mushroom and timber production in Swedish Scots pine forest
University essay from SLU/Southern Swedish Forest Research CentreAbstract : The economic value of Swedish forests is largely linked to the production of timber and pulp. Non-timber forest products such as berries and wild mushrooms have yet been considered commercially less valuable than what the trees produce. READ MORE
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12. Distribution channel strategy design : Application and implementation in healthcare
University essay from KTH/Industriell ekonomi och organisation (Inst.)Abstract : Healthcare is a very important and intimate service virtually all people use at least at some occasion in a lifetime. It is also highly complex and variable with heterogeneous patients requiring individualised attention in order to be effectively treated. READ MORE
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13. THE POTENTIAL OF BIOCHAR TO ENHANCE ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY IN SWEDEN
University essay from Institutionen för geovetenskaperAbstract : Environmental sustainability in Sweden is challenged by rising greenhouse gas emissions from transportation, input-intensive agriculture and potentially unsustainable removal of organic material from forests and farmland. The Swedish government is working towards sixteen environmental quality objectives in order to overcome these problems, among others. READ MORE
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14. Skogsnormens ersättning vid intrång i jämförelse med värdet av rationellt skogsbruk
University essay from SLU/Dept. of Forest EconomicsAbstract : Svenska Kraftnät ansvarar för det svenska stamnätet för el, dess konstruktion, underhåll och transporten av el. Varje kraftledningsgata sträcker sig över många privata markägares fasta egendom. READ MORE
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15. The effects of happiness on productivity: Panel evidence from the United Kingdom
University essay from Lunds universitet/Nationalekonomiska institutionenAbstract : This paper examines the causal effects of happiness on productivity, using cross sectional time series (panel) data from the UK, spanning the years 1996 to 2008. Innovations in this paper include the use of total compensation instead of wage rates as a proxy for productivity, the use of overall happiness instead of operationalized measures of happiness, and the use of GIS-derived bioclimate variables to instrument for happiness. READ MORE