Keith Jakee
Florida Atlantic University
18 Papers
64 Citations
Keith Jakee is an academic researcher from Florida Atlantic University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Entrepreneurship & Welfare state. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 17 publications. Previous affiliations of Keith Jakee include RMIT University.
Chat about Author
Papers
Does corruption grease or sand the wheels of development? New results based on disaggregated data
Kanybek Nur-tegin,Keith Jakee +1 more
TL;DR: The authors revisited the debate over whether corruption "sands" or "greases" the wheels of income growth and found that although certain types of corruption may help "grease" business transactions, evidence in favor of the sand hypothesis is stronger.
60
Praxeology, Entrepreneurship and the Market Process: A Review of Kirzner's Contribution
Keith Jakee,Heath Spong +1 more
TL;DR: Kirzner as mentioned in this paper argues that the standard core of microeconomics allows little room for entrepreneurial elements, particularly if the latter are defined in terms of uncertainty, intuition, ignorance, and disequilibrium.
38
Asymmetries in scheduling slots and game-day revenues: An example from the Australian Football League
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate whether the Australian Football League exhibits attendance asymmetries across the available playing slots, and whether various subgroups of teams in the AFL have equal access to the more highly attended time slots.
12
Uncertainty, institutional structure and the entrepreneurial process
Keith Jakee,Heath Spong +1 more
- 01 Jan 2003
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors construct an account that is thoroughly process-oriented and is thus consistent with non-teleological evolutionary foundations, combining theories of structural uncertainty with recent work in the theory of social institutions.
7
External habit formation and dependency in the welfare state
Keith Jakee,Guang-Zhen Sun +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, a positive interactive feedback loop between slow-moving external habits and welfare policies makes the extent of redistribution a "moving target" and therefore, setting arbitrary redistributive goals may never satisfy redistributional demands in future periods.
6