Publications

La plupart des informations présentées ci-dessous ont été récupérées via RePEc avec l'aimable autorisation de Christian Zimmermann
Japanese Economic Philosophy: An IntroductionBook chapterGilles Campagnolo, In: Revue de Philosophie Economique / Review of Economic Philosophy, 2019-07, Volume 20(1), Issue 1, pp. 3-34, Vrin, 2019

Plan:
Western Philosophy Reaches the Shores of Japan
“Western” Economics Reaches the Shores of Japan
Japanese Economics Rises with the Japanese Economy and “Economic Philosophy” Emerges
The Stakes Today : Economic Philosophy and Liberal Norms Between Europe and Japan

Variational analysis and Variational rationality in Behavioral sciences: stationary trapsBook chapterBoris S. Mordukhovich et Antoine Soubeyran, In: Variational Analysis and Set Optimization, A. A. Khan, E. Köbis et C. Tammer (Eds.), 2019-07, pp. 1-24, CRC Press, 2019

This paper concerns applications of variational analysis to some local aspects of behavioral science modeling by developing an effective variational rationality approach to these and related issues. Our main attention is paid to local stationary traps, which reflect such local equilibrium and the like positions in behavioral science models that are not worthwhile to quit. We establish constructive linear optimistic evaluations of local stationary traps by using generalized differential tools of variational analysis that involve subgradients and normals for nonsmooth and nonconvex objects as well as variational and extremal principles.

How Variational Rational Agents Would Play Nash: A Generalized Proximal Alternating Linearized MethodBook chapterAntoine Soubeyran, João Carlos O. Souza et Joao Xavier Cru Neto, In: Variational Analysis and Set Optimization, A. A. Khan, E. Köbis et C. Tammer (Eds.), 2019-07, pp. 44-71, CRC Press, 2019

This chapter considers potential games, where agents play, each period, Nash worthwhile moves in alternation, such that their unilateral motivation to change rather than to stay, other players being supposed to stay, are high enough with respect to their resistance to change rather than to stay. This defines a generalized proximal alternating linearized algorithm, where resistance to change plays a major role, perturbation terms of alternating proximal algorithms being seen as the disutilities of net costs of moving.

Variational Analysis and Variational Rationality in Behavioral SciencesBook chapterBoris S. Mordukhovich et Antoine Soubeyran, In: Variational Analysis and Set Optimization, , Elisabeth Köbis et Christiane Tammer (Eds.), 2019-07, pp. 1-29, CRC Press, 2019

This paper concerns applications of variational analysis to some local aspects of behavioral science modeling by developing an effective variational rationality approach to these and related issues. Our main attention is paid to local stationary traps, which reflect such local equilibrium and the like positions in behavioral science models that are not worthwhile to quit. We establish constructive linear optimistic evaluations of local stationary traps by using generalized differential tools of variational analysis that involve subgradients and normals for nonsmooth and nonconvex objects as well as variational and extremal principles.

Culture et responsabilité des collectivitésBook chapterIn: Quelle responsabilité culturelle pour l’entreprise ?, Gil Charbonnier (Eds.), 2019-06, pp. 117-124, PUAM, 2019
Culture et mondialisation économiqueBook chapterPierre Garello, In: Quelle responsabilité culturelle pour l’entreprise ?, Gil Charbonnier (Eds.), 2019-06, pp. 109-116, PUAM, 2019
The Market for Artemisinin-Based Combination Therapies and the New Era of “Market Makers”Book chapterSauman Singh et Fabienne Orsi, In: Regulations, Markets, Health : questioning current stakes of pharmaceuticals in Africa Proceedings, Carine Baxerres et Charlie Marquis (Eds.), 2018-12, pp. 42-52, 2018

The pharmaceutical market is not tailored to cater the needs of patients who are located in the economically disadvantaged Southern countries, particularly in Sub-Saharan Africa. International organizations are working in numerous ways to overcome this challenge and to increase the access to medicines at affordable prices in the global South. They recommend and proscribe drugs, shape national policies, assure drug quality, provide funding and technical assistance, manage the supply chain, negotiate prices with manufacturers, decide who can compete and influence the behavior of competitors. Recently, some international organizations like Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative (DNDi) and Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) have successfully ventured into new drug development for tropical diseases. This has resulted in the evolution of complex relational dynamics and interdependencies between states, firms and international organizations. The structural power to bargain in such relationships often does not lie with states but rather with international organizations who create conditions under which firms would agree to invest in a particular venture. Thus, international organizations have acquired the role of “market makers” who not only convert the need for medicines into real demand but also shape the institutional environment for market functioning by setting up the rules of exchange for market transactions.
However, this phenomenon is not well studied. In this regard, this study sheds light on the role of international organizations in the creation and functioning of the market for artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) for malaria. It explains the role of WHO treatment guidelines in the global acceptance and legitimization of ACTs and WHO prequalification program in assuring quality. It further elaborates on the importance of donor funding, negotiation with manufacturers, the introduction of new ACT formulations to increase competition and stabilization of the supply of raw artemisinin on the reduction of treatment prices. It also explains how business strategies of firms are shaped by the action of
international organizations.

Stock Market Bubble Migration: From Shanghai to Hong Kong: Essays in Honor of Georges PratBook chapterEric Girardin, Roselyne Joyeux et Shuping Shi, In: Uncertainty, Expectations and Asset Price Dynamics, 2018-12, pp. 173-192, Springer International Publishing, 2018

The speculative nature of the stock market in Mainland China has attracted the attention of many observers. However while the degree of integration of the Hong Kong market with its Mainland counterpart has monopolized the interest of researchers, they have neglected the diffusion of bubbles from the latter to the former. We thus propose the first study of such bubble migration. Focusing on the period 2005–2017, we use the Phillips et al. (Int Econ Rev 56:1043–1078, 2015a; Int Econ Rev 52:201–226, 2015b) recursive explosive root test to detect and date speculative episodes in both markets. We then implement the Greenaway-McGrevy and Phillips (NZ Econ Pap 50:88–113, 2016) methodology to detect the presence of migration between the two markets. We detect significant, but dwindling, bubble migration from Shanghai to Hong Kong.

Intra-household bargaining in poor countriesBook chapterJean-Marie Baland et Roberta Ziparo, In: Towards Gender Equity in Development, S. Anderson, L. Beaman et J.-P. Platteau (Eds.), 2018-11, pp. 69-96, Oxford University Press, 2018

This paper is intended to bridge the theoretical literature describing efficient intra-household behaviour and the development literature that collects empirical regularities pointing toward the existence of strategic decision-making among spouses.
It examines the key elements of the collective model and discusses its relevance to analysing intra-household behaviour in poor countries. It explores the role that risk and uncertainty, information asymmetries, power imbalances, arranged marriages, strategic investment, gender norms, and extended households play in the attainment of efficiency.

L’agent économique et ses représentations : une introductionBook chapterGilles Campagnolo, Jean-Sébastien Gharbi, Philippe Grill et Jean Magnan de Bornier, In: Revue de Philosophie Economique / Review of Economic Philosophy, 2018-11, Volume 19, Issue 1, pp. 3-13, Vrin, 2018