In March 2011, Sinha presented his own BBC Radio 4 programme, Paul Sinha's Quiz Culture, in which he explored the world of competitive quizzing. His second documentary, The Sinha Test, aired on 14 July 2011 and examined patriotism and sporting allegiance.[16][17] In July 2012, he wrote and presented a programme called The Sinha Games on BBC Radio 4 about the Olympic Games and his experience as a Londoner.[18]

The 2004 event included 330 students with perfect 4.00 GPAs and 160 students who scored 30 or higher on the ACT. Competition participants who did not win a Medallion Scholarship were awarded either a $24,000 Board of Trustees Scholarship or a $4,800 WMU Academic Scholarship.


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Congress selected a perfect clickbait title for its hearing in late April: "Treating the Problem: Addressing Anticompetitive Conduct and Consolidation in Health Care Markets." But the hearing itself was long on rhetoric and short on facts.

R&D activities and incentives, together with the pace of the resulting technical progress, have been core issues ever since the pioneering work of Schumpeter (1942) and the consequent debate about the so-called Schumpeterian hypothesis, according to which the higher is the degree of market power enjoyed by a firm, the higher is her incentive to invest in innovation. This debate has received a crucial impulse by Arrow (1962), putting forward convincing argument against the Schumpeterian claim, by pointing out that a firm operating initially under perfect competition should indeed be endowed with the highest possible incentive to strive for an innovation whereby, if successful, she could throw her rivals out of the market and acquire monopoly power over the latter.

Most countries pursue policies that restrict free trade in some way. It often follows that domestic resources are not optimally allocated across different traded and non-traded goods or across different economic activities in an economy. There has been a great deal of interest among economists in evaluating the impact of trade distortions as captured by the concept of Domestic Resource Cost (DRC). The paper by Bhagwati and Srinivasan (1979) included in this volume analyses the impact of DRC on different economic activities. They propose an amended concept of DRC that adjusts primary factor costs using shadow factor prices, and use a tariff-distorted goods price ratio and a production possibility curve to understand how trade distorted equilibrium differs from an optimal free trade equilibrium in a small economy. The authors go on to examine a situation where there is a factor market imperfection along with trade distortion, as is the case with many developing countries. In this context, they show the conventional DRC index may not be an appropriate measure for resource allocation changes as compared to the free trade outcome. They go on to suggest the use of second best shadow prices even in the presence of perfect factor markets. Finally, they demonstrate the role of public sector projects for welfare improvement in such contexts. ff782bc1db

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