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DIW Economic Bulletin 30/31 / 2015
In 2008 and 2009, during the economic crisis, Germany’s industrial enterprises invested considerably less in research and development (R&D). From 2010 to 2013, investments increased markedly again by an annual growth rate of 6.8 percent. This increase can be partly traced back to the process of catching-up after the crisis. Considering the period 2008 to 2013 research expenditures increased by annually ...
2015| Alexander Eickelpasch
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DIW Economic Bulletin 30/31 / 2015
2015
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DIW Economic Bulletin 30/31 / 2015
Why do some people make better financial decisions than others do? The level of financial literacy plays an important role: Quality schooling that also deals with financial issues likewise leads to better financial decisions. However, many studies neglect how parenting also influences financial behavior. This report shows that parents also have an indirect effect on the financial literacy of their ...
2015| Antonia Grohmann, Lukas Menkhoff
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DIW Economic Bulletin 30/31 / 2015
2015
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DIW Economic Bulletin 28/29 / 2015
Climate protection is a global challenge that all countries have a common but differentiated responsibility to address. However, not all governments are willing to commit to targets of equal stringency, and individual countries may put different emphases on carbon pricing in their policy mix. Carbon prices may thus continue to differ over longer time horizons. Therefore, measures to protect production ...
2015| Karsten Neuhoff, William Acworth, Roland Ismer, Oliver Sartor, Lars Zetterberg
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DIW Economic Bulletin 28/29 / 2015
2015
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DIW Economic Bulletin 28/29 / 2015
Since 2007, the European cement and steel sectors have been characterized by substantial surplus production capacity. Hence re-investment in primary production of many materials remains limited and endangers the longer-term economic viability of many plants. Opportunities for innovation and modernization could overcome these challenges. They are linked to new demands for more efficient and lower-carbon ...
2015| Karsten Neuhoff, Andrzej Ancygier, Jean-Pierre Ponssard, Philippe Quirion, Nagore Sabio, Oliver Sartor, Misato Sato, Anne Schopp
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DIW Economic Bulletin 28/29 / 2015
2015
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DIW Economic Bulletin 27 / 2015
On July 1, 1990, when capital controls in the European Economic Community were removed, the path was paved for the introduction of the euro. This path was marked by a compromise between two schools of thought—those who assumed that the creation of the European Central Bank would be followed by greater economic convergence and political integration, and those who saw the single currency as the coronation ...
2015| Ferdinand Fichtner, Philipp König
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DIW Economic Bulletin 27 / 2015
Twenty-five years ago, East Germany adopted the deutschmark as its currency. In terms of East German economic development, monetary union proved to be a disaster. With virtually no warning, East Germany’s few productive factories and businesses were exposed to free market competition; industrial production collapsed in a way unparalleled in history. Nevertheless, for political reasons, introducing ...
2015| Karl Brenke
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DIW Economic Bulletin 27 / 2015
2015
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DIW Economic Bulletin 27 / 2015
Precisely 25 years ago, on July 1, 1990, German monetary union came into force. On the same day, capital controls in Europe were abolished, creating the basis for European monetary union and the euro. These two historical events fundamentally changed Germany and the rest of Europe. Both German and European monetary union were and still are being heavily criticized and debated. Was the design of German ...
2015| Marcel Fratzscher
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DIW Economic Bulletin 27 / 2015
2015
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DIW Economic Bulletin 26 / 2015
2015
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DIW Economic Bulletin 26 / 2015
2015| Ferdinand Fichtner, Guido Baldi, Franziska Bremus, Karl Brenke, Christian Dreger, Hella Engerer, Christoph Große Steffen, Simon Junker, Claus Michelsen, Katharina Pijnenburg, Maximilian Podstawski, Malte Rieth, Kristina van Deuverden
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DIW Economic Bulletin 26 / 2015
2015
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DIW Economic Bulletin 25 / 2015
2015
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DIW Economic Bulletin 25 / 2015
According to calculations based on the Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) study, average disposable household income rose by five percent in real terms between 2000 and 2012. Only the highest earners have benefited from this development. While real income in the top ten percent rose by more than 15 percent, the earnings of the middle income groups stagnated, and even fell in the lower income groups. As a ...
2015| Jan Goebel, Markus M. Grabka, Carsten Schröder
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DIW Economic Bulletin 25 / 2015
2015
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DIW Economic Bulletin 24 / 2015
2015