A social marketing perspective on road freight transportation of fresh fruits and vegetables: a Slovene case
Journal Title: Economic Research-Ekonomska Istraživanja - Year 2017, Vol 30, Issue 1
Abstract
With the large increase in transportation over the last decades and the associated negative impacts upon the environment and society, a more sustainable use of transport is a crucial policy issue. This analysis focuses on road freight transport of selected produce (carrots, cabbage, apples and pears) with the aim to appraise the sustainability of road freight transport of these for the Slovene market. To this end, we take into account self-sufficiency, import and export features, transport needs, produce origin and prices differences between domestic and non-domestic produce. The method used for obtaining transported quantities, exported from and imported to the county, was material flow accounts (MFA). Then we undertook an analysis of sustainability of road transport of produce where we considered the country’s transport needs. The study finds that road freight transport for selected produce is not sustainable. Recognising the normative dimensions of sustainability, the role of social marketing in this context is explored and suggestions on how to promote more sustainable transport solutions advanced.
Are business forecasts of the construction sector rational? Survey-based evidence from Malaysia
This paper extends the direct measure to business expectations in assessing the doctrine of forecast rationality in the contemporary environment of Malaysia’s construction sector. The survey’s expectational series on bus...
The nexus between oil prices and stock prices of oil, technology and transportation companiesunder multiple regime shifts
This study investigates the interaction between crude oil prices and the stock prices of oil, technology and transportation companies listed on U.S. stock exchanges, using weekly data covering the period from 2 January 1...
Difference or not to difference an integrated time series? An empirical investigation
This paper uses the gross domestic product growth rates of Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia and China in an empirical examination to determine whether an integrated time series should be differenced before it is used for fo...
Dynamic immunisation does not imply cash flow matching: a hard application to Spain
Immunisation is not a static strategy as the literature affirms: we argue that the conditions established for reaching immunisation are unbalanced in themselves as times go on. This paper presents a valid, comprehensive...
Cost allocation for the problem of pollution reduction: a dynamic cooperative game approach
This paper studies CO2 emissions at a global level. The authors use Dynamic Optimisation to derive the minimum penalty cost on countries every single time. They then use an Imputation Distribution Procedure to allocate t...