Essays about: "LCH"
Found 4 essays containing the word LCH.
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1. Identifiering och analys av importerade ridhästar i Sverige
University essay from SLU/Dept. of Anatomy, Physiology and BiochemistryAbstract : As the purpose of horses and riding in Sweden has changed, the breeding has been adapted to the market. In order to develop the Swedish Warmblood horse (SWB), some of the horses used for breeding have been imported from other countries. READ MORE
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2. Demographic Changes, Household Savings and Economic Growth in All China: A Time-Series Approach
University essay from Lunds universitet/Ekonomisk-historiska institutionenAbstract : This paper investigates the effects of population age structure and economic growth on the household saving rate in China and examines whether life cycle hypothesis (LCH) holds in the country like China, where LCH may be less applicable. By applying two popular time series econometric techniques (cointegration technique and vector error correction model), the author examines the long-run convergence between household saving rate, age structure of population and GDP growth in all China from 1963 to 2006. READ MORE
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3. Modigliani’s Life Cycle Hypothesis presence amongst Norwegian pensioners
University essay from Lunds universitet/Ekonomisk-historiska institutionenAbstract : The aim of this thesis is to determine to what extend Modigliani’s Life Cycle Hypothesis is present amongst Norwegian pensioners’ behavioural pattern. The high economic growth the pensioners have experienced during working ages should have given them the opportunity to accumulate the level of wealth needed for a smooth consumption throughout their lifetime. READ MORE
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4. Savings patterns during Finland's industrial take-off: Helsinki 1850-1900: Savings behaviour in a society without public social security schemes
University essay from Handelshögskolan i Stockholm/Institutionen för nationalekonomiAbstract : This thesis analyzes household saving patterns during 1850-1900 in Finland’s capital city Helsinki by examining aggregate net wealth per age cohorts, as well as net wealth per social class - defined broadly as working, middle and upper class - for each age cohort. 1850-1900 corresponded to the first decades of Finland’s industrial revolution, and a phase when its credit market – and indeed Europe’s – was rapidly getting more sophisticated. READ MORE