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The good news is that treating one condition may have spillover benefits for the other.
Other industries received spillover benefits from new technologies, the low costs of natural resources and a technically trained labor force.
There's bound to be some spillover benefit there, but I want to spend the evening with you for purely selfish reasons."
The authors are particularly skeptical of this type of calculation because it ignores potential spillover benefits that arise from attracting prized plants.
The lopsided financing might eventually create numerous research centers abroad, with all the rich spillover benefits that come with such centers.
These early new growth models incorporated positive externalities to capital accumulation where one firm's investment in technology generates spillover benefits to other firms because knowledge spreads.
If spillover benefits are a drawback for corporations, they're a huge boon to society, which is why it makes sense for government to try to foster them.
Dr. Kleber said that finding a cure for drug addicts would have spillover benefits of reducing crime and cutting welfare and health-care costs.
The researchers base their conclusions about the cost-effectiveness of free distribution on the proven spillover benefits of increased ITN usage.
But solving their own problems has spillover benefits for other people, just as fixing up a rundown building for your own business makes the neighborhood nicer for everyone.
Economists have long argued that companies will underinvest in R. & D. and infrastructure because so-called spillover benefits prevent their capturing all the value they produce.
They risk their own resources, rather than the public's, but on those rare occasions when they succeed - and even sometimes when they don't - the public enjoys spillover benefits.
Even more important, the lucky fools create huge spillover benefits for society: new sources of wealth, new jobs, new industries offering less-risky opportunities, new technologies that improve life.
An I.B.M. or a Du Pont or a General Motors might not care in which country these spillover benefits fall, since they operate worldwide.
Dr. Gisel said Mr. Radanovich was looking to increase tourism in the Yosemite Valley because it had spillover benefits for the surrounding communities and ensured the economic vitality of the park.
However, while there may be a positive correlation between homeownership and spillover benefits like low crime rates and high civic participation, there is little evidence that homeownership actually reduces crime or increases community engagement.
And one of their findings suggests that there are spillover benefits to other businesses and workers from attracting an industry leader: employment and payroll tended to grow in that industry in neighboring counties when a major plant moved next door.
BUT while many avenue denizens say that Sixth Avenue is getting spillover benefits from Rockefeller Center and surrounding business improvement districts, others say the avenue will eventually suffer from the progress those BID's have made in cleaning up their neighborhoods.
Here is just one of the ways the Internal Revenue Service sends research centers - and their rich spillover benefits - overseas: In 1977, the I.R.S. issued tax code regulations (Section 861) restricting the deduction of research and development expenses from United States income.
Osaka's interests may lie in becoming the capital of East Asia and not competing with Tokyo. . . . The rest of the population has legitimate doubts about just how far the health of these cities has any spillover benefits for them. . . . Regions pull in different directions."
Excluding the minimal spillover benefits, one cost-benefit study concluded that the net benefits of the EPZs, in terms of jobs, trade and local purchases, had grown to the point where by 1982 they exceeded the costs of providing infrastructure and of foregone tax revenue (Warr, 1987: pp. 52-3).