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- Ratchet effect
- Muller's ratchet
- Incentive
- Robert Higgs
- Brownian ratchet
- Ratchet & Clank
- Overton window
- Mission creep
- Ratchet & Clank: Rift Apart
- Hysteresis
- Answered: The ratchet effect means that:… | bartleby
- Analysis Of Living On A Lifeboat By Garrett Hardin
- Answered: The movement of individuals and households from
- Answered: What is the Ratchet effect? Why is it… | bartleby
- Which of the following (historically inaccurate) examples best ...
- Answered: What are the government’s fiscal policy options
- Answered: Refer to the diagrams. Suppose that… | bartleby
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- 1. The concept behind the latin phrase "ceteris paribus" is
ratchet effect
Ratchet effect GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21
The ratchet effect is a concept in sociology and economics illustrating the difficulty with reversing a course of action once a specific thing has occurred, analogous with the mechanical ratchet that allows movement in one direction and seizes or tightens in the opposite. The concept has been applied to multiple fields of study and is related to the phenomena of scope creep, mission creep, and feature creep.
Background
The ratchet effect first came to light in Alan Peacock and Jack Wiseman's 1961 report "The Growth of Public Expenditure in the United Kingdom." Peacock and Wiseman found that public spending increases like a ratchet following periods of crisis.
The term was later expanded upon by American historian Robert Higgs in the 1987 book Crisis and Leviathan, highlighting Peacock and Wiseman's research as it relates to governments experiencing difficulty in rolling back huge bureaucratic organizations created initially for temporary needs, such as wartime measures, natural disasters, or economic crises.
The effect may likewise afflict large businesses with myriad layers of bureaucracy which resist reform or dismantling. In workplaces, "ratchet effects refer to the tendency for central controllers to base next year's targets on last year's performance, meaning that managers who expect still to be in place in the next target period have a perverse incentive not to exceed targets even if they could easily do so."
Applications
= Famine cycle
=Garrett Hardin, a biologist and environmentalist, used the phrase to describe how food aid keeps people alive who would otherwise die in a famine. They live and multiply in better times, making another bigger crisis inevitable, since the supply of food has not been increased.
= Production strategy
=Jean Tirole used the concept in his pioneering work on regulation and monopolies. The ratchet effect can denote an economic strategy arising in an environment where incentive depends on both current and past production, such as in a competitive industry employing piece rates. The producers observe that since incentive is readjusted based on their production, any increase in production confers only a temporary increase in incentive while requiring a permanently greater expenditure of work. They therefore decide not to reveal hidden production capacity unless forced to do so.
= Game theory
=The ratchet effect is central to the mathematical Parrondo's paradox.
= Cultural anthropology
=In 1999 comparative psychologist Michael Tomasello used the ratchet effect metaphor to shed light on the evolution of culture. He explains that the sharedness of human culture means that it is cumulative in character. Once a certain invention has been made, it can jump from one mind to another (by means of imitation) and thus a whole population can acquire a new trait (and so the ratchet has gone "up" one tooth). Comparative psychologist Claudio Tennie, Tomasello, and Josep Call call this the "cultural ratchet" and they describe it, amongst primates, as being unique to human culture.
= Developmental biology
=Receptors which initiate cell fate transduction cascades, in early embryo development, exhibit a ratchet effect in response to morphogen concentrations. The low receptor occupancy permits increases in receptor occupancy which alter the cell fate, but the high receptor affinity does not allow ligand dissociation leading to a cell fate of a lower concentration.
= Technology regulation
=The ratchet effect is reflected in the Collingridge dilemma.
= Consumer products
=The ratchet effect can be seen in long-term trends in the production of many consumer goods. Year by year, automobiles gradually acquire more features. Competitive pressures make it hard for manufacturers to cut back on the features unless forced by a true scarcity of raw materials (e.g., an oil shortage that drives costs up radically). University textbook publishers gradually get "stuck" in producing books that have excess content and features.
In software development, products which compete often will use specification lists of competitive products to add features, presuming that they must provide all of the features of the competitive product, plus add additional functionality. This can lead to "feature creep" in which it is considered necessary to add all of a competitor's features whether or not customers will use them.
Airlines initiate frequent-flyer programs that become ever harder to terminate. Successive generations of home appliances gradually acquire more features; new editions of software acquire more features; and so on. With all of these goods, there is ongoing debate as to whether the added features truly improve usability, or simply increase the tendency for people to buy the goods.
= Trade legislation
=The term was included by the MAI Negotiating Group in the 1990s as the essence of a device to enforce legislative progress toward "free trade" by preventing legislative rollback with the compulsory assent of governments as a condition of participation.
Rollback is the liberalisation process by which the reduction and eventual elimination of nonconforming measures to the MAI would take place. It is a dynamic element linked with standstill, which provides its starting point. Combined with standstill, it would produce a "ratchet effect", where any new liberalisation measures would be "locked in" so they could not be rescinded or nullified over time.
See also
Argument to moderation
Muller's ratchet
Tragedy of the commons
Collingridge dilemma
Entropy
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian: ratchet effect
ratchet effect
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Answered: The ratchet effect means that:… | bartleby
The ratchet effect means that: Multiple Choice when aggregate demand increases, the price level remains constant. when aggregate supply increases, the price level decreases. when aggregate demand decreases, the price level remains constant. …
Analysis Of Living On A Lifeboat By Garrett Hardin
This theory comes out the fact that there is too many people on earth, and somehow we want to continue to have more even though we don’t possess the means for everyone to survive. Hardin also explains the ratchet effect, and how in nature, over-population is self-correcting, and the fact that humans feel the need to adjust this natural cycle
Answered: The movement of individuals and households from
Transcribed Image Text: The movement of individuals and households from one income quintile to another over time is called Mulliple Choice income mobility. the ratchet effect. income averaging. wealth turnover.
Answered: What is the Ratchet effect? Why is it… | bartleby
Q: and affect market outcomes and explain the effect of government regulation on prices? A: Supply is defined as the quantity of product per unit time that is willing to sell at different… Q: For each policy listed, identify whether it is a command-and-control policy (regulation), tradable…
Which of the following (historically inaccurate) examples best ...
David Matthews is an economist studying the effect of cold weather on the purchasing of streaming movies. Place the following steps in order. David notices that people tend to stream more movies at home when the weather is cold outside.
Answered: What are the government’s fiscal policy options
How does the “ratchet effect” affect anti-inflationary fiscal policy? What are the government’s fiscal policy options for ending severe demand-pull inflation? Which of these fiscal options do you think might be favored by a person who wants to preserve the size of government?
Answered: Refer to the diagrams. Suppose that… | bartleby
Refer to the diagrams. Suppose that government undertakes fiscal policy designed to increase aggregate demand from AD₁ to AD2 and thereby to increase GDP from X to Z.
Answered: 10. You have developed a transcription assay that ...
Solution for 10. You have developed a transcription assay that recapitulates the in vivo regulation of the promoter for the RNA Pol II-transcribed Ratchet gene.…
Answered: Suppose that the coronavirus pandemic (COVID 19
Assume that all other things remain constant. aggregate supply? In a. A widespread fear of depression on the part of consumers. AD curve (right, left), output (up, down) and price level (up, down) (assuming no ratchet effect). b. The expectation of rapid inflation. AD curve (right, left), output (up, down) and price level (up, down). с.
1. The concept behind the latin phrase "ceteris paribus" is
Which of the following (historically inaccurate) examples best demonstrates the process of the ratchet effect? a. Kesha brushes her teeth with a bottle of whiskey, but Lady Gaga gives her a tube of toothpaste because it cleans teeth better. b. Marx creates a new political ideology, Lenin builds on that ideology, and Stalin further expands on it. c.