İktisat Bölümü
Permanent URI for this communityhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12514/92
Browse
Browsing İktisat Bölümü by WoS Q "Q4"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
- Results Per Page
- Sort Options
Article GENDER EFFECT IN EXPLAINING MOBILITY PATTERNS IN THE LABOR MARKET: A CASE STUDY OF TURKEY(WILEY, 2014) Tekgüç, Hasan; Tekgüç, HasanThis paper examines the importance of gender for different job mobility patterns using an extensive household survey data from zmir, the third largest city in Turkey. The determinants of job-to-job and job-to-nonemployment transitions are analyzed with the help of a multinomial logit estimation method. The results indicate that there is a distinction regarding the probability of job mobility patterns based on gender. It is more likely for women to be engaged in job-to-nonemployment transition, whereas men tend to change jobs more often. Although gender plays a significant role in job mobility patterns, traditionally imposed social constraints associated with childcare and household duties provide us with mixed results considering the behavior of women in the job market. On the other hand, having highly paid and secure jobs decreases the probability of both patterns of job mobility.Article Impact of fossil fuels and renewable energy consumption on economic growth in Paris Club Countries(AIP Publishing, 2022) Atay Polat, Melike; Öztürk, İlhan; Aslan, Alper; Özsolak, Baki; Atay Polat, Melike; Turan, ZubeyirThe relationship between economic growth (in terms of GDP) and renewable energy (RE) and nonrenewable energy (NRE) consumption was investigated in 20 countries featured on the Renewable Energy Country Attractiveness Index list, also known as the Paris Club. The effect of both RE and NRE consumption on economic growth is discussed in the growth model based on the neoclassical production function. Labor and capital, which are important dynamics of growth, are also considered in the model. Granger causality and panel vector autoregression analysis are performed for the period 1991–2016. The results show that neither RE nor NRE consumption has a positive effect on economic growth. In reality, a 1% increase in RE consumption will reduce the GDP growth by 0.14%. For the effect of GDP growth on energy types, if growth increases by 1%, NRE consumption increases by 5.54%. If economic growth increases by 1%, a reduction of 1.73% occurs in RE consumption. In contrast, a causal link between both types of energy to growth has not been determined. There is no statistically significant coefficient of NRE and capital factors on GDP. A mutually positive and statistically significant relationship was determined between labor and growth. According to the results of variance decomposition, the basic dynamic of growth is itself: over a ten-year period, growth was affected by itself by 98%.