1,278 research outputs found
Critical Fontana
Review of Lucio Fontana: Between Utopia and Kitsch by Anthony White. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2011. 336 pp. $29.95 cloth
Demand for Crop Insurance by Organic Corn and Soybean Farmers in Three Major Producing States
A survey of organic grain and oilseed producers in Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin was conducted to collect information about their demographic characteristics, production and price risk management strategies, yields and losses, and crop insurance decisions. The data are analyzed using a discrete choice model to establish which variables influence organic producers’ decision of whether to purchase crop insurance and also which ones affect the insurance product choice when applicable. The study describes the risk profiles of organic producers, and analyzes whether significant variations exist between organic and conventional methods of production so as to quantitatively determine the differential production risk associated with organic production. This research may contribute to the design of an organic crop insurance policy in which organic producers would be charged according to their idiosyncratic production risks, rather than the arbitrary 5% blanket premium surcharge currently in use.
Organic Crop Prices, or 2x Conventional Ones?
Cointegration is tested between organic and conventional corn and soybean markets in several locations throughout the U.S. using a unique data set. Organic prices are found to behave like jump processes rather than diffusions, and Monte Carlo methods are developed to compute appropriate critical values for such tests. Findings indicate that no long-run relationship exists between organic and conventional prices, implying that price determination for organic corn and soybean is independent from that for the conventional crops. This suggests that organic corn and soybean prices are driven by demand and supply forces idiosyncratic to the organic market. For each crop, cointegrating spatial relationships are found between prices at the main organic markets. However, such relationships are generally weaker than the ones for the corresponding conventional prices, implying that organic markets are more affected by idiosyncratic shocks than conventional markets. �cointegration; jump process; organic crops; organic production; price analysis; organic price premiums
Symmetries of quasiplatonic Riemann surfaces
We state and prove a corrected version of a theorem of Singerman, which
relates the existence of symmetries (anticonformal involutions) of a
quasiplatonic Riemann surface (one uniformised by a normal
subgroup of finite index in a cocompact triangle group ) to the
properties of the group . We give examples to illustrate the
revised necessary and sufficient conditions for the existence of symmetries,
and we relate them to properties of the associated dessins d'enfants, or
hypermaps
DEMAND FOR CROP INSURANCE BY ORGANIC CORN AND SOYBEAN FARMERS IN THREE MAJOR PRODUCING STATES
A survey of organic grain and oilseed producers in Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin was conducted to collect information about their demographic characteristics, production and price risk management strategies, yields and losses, and crop insurance decisions. The data are analyzed using a discrete choice model to establish which variables influence organic producers’ decision of whether to purchase crop insurance and also which ones affect the insurance product choice when applicable. The study describes the risk profiles of organic producers, and analyzes whether significant variations exist between organic and conventional methods of production so as to quantitatively determine the differential production risk associated with organic production. This research may contribute to the design of an organic crop insurance policy in which organic producers would be charged according to their idiosyncratic production risks, rather than the arbitrary 5% blanket premium surcharge currently in use.crop insurance, organic farming, organic production, Agricultural and Food Policy, Risk and Uncertainty, Q18,
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