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pro vyhledávání: '"Matthew Chesnes"'
Autor:
Matthew Chesnes, Ginger Zhe Jin
Publikováno v:
Information Economics and Policy. 46:1-22
Beginning in 1997, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) allowed television advertisements to make major statements about a prescription drug, while referring to detailed information on the internet. The hope was that consumers would seek additional
Publikováno v:
Marketing Science. 36:879-907
Increased competition from the Internet has raised a concern of product quality for online prescription drugs. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) prohibits the importation of unapproved drugs into the US and the National Association of Boards of
Autor:
Matthew Chesnes
Publikováno v:
Energy Economics. 50:324-336
This paper considers the effects of refinery outages (due to planned turn-arounds or unplanned events) on current petroleum product prices and future refinery investment. Empirical evidence on these relationships is mixed and highly dependent on the
Autor:
Matthew Chesnes
Publikováno v:
The Energy Journal. 37
This paper presents new evidence of asymmetric pass-through, the notion that upward cost shocks are passed through faster than downward cost shocks, in U.S. gasoline prices. Much of the extant literature comes to seemingly contradictory conclusions a
Autor:
Matthew Chesnes, Ginger Zhe Jin
Publikováno v:
SSRN Electronic Journal.
Beginning in 1997, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) allowed television advertisements to make major statements about a prescription drug, while referring to detailed drug information on the internet (FDA 1997; 2015). The hope was that consumers
Autor:
Matthew Chesnes
Publikováno v:
SSRN Electronic Journal.
This paper considers the effects of refinery outages (due to planned turn-arounds or unplanned events) on current petroleum product prices and future refinery investment. Empirical evidence on these relationships is mixed and highly dependent on the
Autor:
Matthew Chesnes
Publikováno v:
SSRN Electronic Journal.
This paper presents new evidence of asymmetric pass-through, the notion that upward cost shocks are passed through faster than downward cost shocks, in U.S. gasoline prices. Much of the extant literature comes to seemingly contradictory conclusions a