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2170 Ergebnisse, ab 681
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1487 / 2015

    Learning from Unrealized versus Realized Prices

    Our market experiment investigates the extent to which traders learn from the price, differentiating between situations where orders are submitted before versus after the price has realized. When market participants have to submit their bids conditional on the price, they show a bias by reacting only to their private information and not to the hypothetical value of the price. In a sequential trading ...

    2015| Kathleen Ngangoué, Georg Weizsäcker
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1486 / 2015

    The Relationship between Healthcare Expenditure and Disposable Personal Income in the US States: A Fractional Integration and Cointegration Analysis

    This study examines the relationship between healthcare expenditure and disposable income in the 50 US states over the period 1966-2009 using fractional integration and cointegration techniques. The degree of integration and nonlinearity of both series are found to vary considerably across states, whilst the fractional cointegration analysis suggests that a long-run relationship exists between them ...

    2015| Guglielmo Maria Caporale, Juncal Cunado, Luis A. Gil-Alana, Rangan Gupta
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1485 / 2015

    The Impact of Wind Power Support Schemes on Technology Choices

    Germany changed renewable remuneration for wind power from a fixed Feed-In Tariff (FIT) to a floating Market Premium Scheme (MPS) in 2012. One aim of this adjustment was to better align the supply of generated wind electricity with the demand for it, e.g. through more system-friendly wind turbine technology choices. In energy systems with a high share of variable renewable energies, such turbines produce ...

    2015| Nils May
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1484 / 2015

    Are Ethical and Social Banks Less Risky? Evidence from a New Dataset

    This paper introduces a new and comprehensive dataset on “alternative” banks in EU and OECD countries. Alternative banks (e.g. ethical, social or sustainable banking) experienced a recent increase in media interest and have been hailed as an answer to the financial crisis but no research exists on their stability. This paper studies whether alternative banks differ from conventional banks in terms ...

    2015| Marlene Karl
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1483 / 2015

    Modelling a Market Stability Reserve in Carbon Markets

    We examine under which conditions a cap-and-trade mechanism can deliver a dynamically efficient abatement pathway and contribute to a robust investment framework. For this we develop a numerical dynamic partial-equilibrium model that includes differentiated objective functions of different market participants for holding emission allowances based on their banking strategy. If the surplus of allowances ...

    2015| Anne Schopp, William Acworth, Daniel Huppmann, Karsten Neuhoff
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1482 / 2015

    European-Wide Inequality in Times of the Financial Crisis

    In view of rising concerns over increasing inequality in the European Union since the financial crisis, this study provides an inequality decomposition of the overall European income distribution by country. The EU Statistics on Income and Living Conditions are our empirical basis. Inequality has risen moderately within the core Euro area, particularly in the last two years of the observation period ...

    2015| Timm Bönke, Carsten Schröder
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1481 / 2015

    How Has the Global Financial Crisis Affected Syndicated Loan Terms in Emerging Markets? Evidence from China

    This paper examines the impact of the recent global financial crisis on the cost of debt capital (syndicated loans) in a leading emerging market, namely China, using difference-in-differences and GARCH approaches. Before the crisis China adopted banking reforms allowing entry of foreign banks and more domestic participation in the syndicated loan market. As a result, during the crisis the volume of ...

    2015| Guglielmo Maria Caporale, Suman Lodh, Monomita Nandy
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1480 / 2015

    Determinants of Chinese Direct Investments in the European Union

    This paper analyses the determinants of Chinese direct investment (DI) in the European Union (EU). Evidence is based on panel Poisson models drawing on two investment monitors for individual projects. We distinguish between the numbers of greenfield investments (GIs) and mergers and acquisitions (M&As). The findings indicate that market size and trade relationships with China are the primary factors ...

    2015| Christian Dreger, Yun Schüler-Zhou, Margot Schüller
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1479 / 2015

    Euro Area Government Bonds: Integration and Fragmentation during the Sovereign Debt Crisis

    The paper analyzes the integration of euro area sovereign bond markets during the European sovereign debt crisis. It tests for contagion (i.e., an intensification in the transmission of shocks across countries), fragmentation (a reduction in spillovers) and flight-to-quality patterns, exploiting the heteroskedasticity of intraday changes in bond yields for identification. The paper finds that euro ...

    2015| Michael Ehrmann, Marcel Fratzscher
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1478 / 2015

    Internationale Verflechtung der Finanzmärkte: ein Versuch zur Quantifizierung des Dominoeffekts in Anlehnung an die Input-Output-Analyse

    Die internationale Verflechtung der Finanzmärkte führt dazu, dass der Ausfall von Krediten in einem Land auch von Geldgebern in anderen Ländern getragen werden muss. Bei einer konsequenten Anwendung des Prinzips der Gläubigerhaftung würde der Vermögensverlust von dem unmittelbar betroffenen Kreditinstitut über dessen in- und ausländische Anteilseigner und Kreditgeber sowie deren Gläubiger bis zu den ...

    2015| Dieter Schumacher
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1477 / 2015

    War, Housing Rents, and Free Market: A Case of Berlin's Rental Housing Market during the World War I

    Before the World War I, the urban rental housing market in Germany could be described as a free and competitive market. The government hardly interfered in the relationships between the landlords and ten- ants. The rents were set freely. During the World War I, the market was hit by several violent shocks. The outbreak of the war led initially to a huge outflow of men from cities to the fronts. Towards ...

    2015| Konstantin A. Kholodilin
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1476 / 2015

    An Economic Assessment of Soil Carbon Sequestration with Biochar in Germany

    Biochar is a carbon-rich solid obtained from the heating of biomass in the (near) absence of oxygen in a process called pyrolysis. Its soil incorporation is increasingly discussed as a means to sequester carbon in soils and, thus, to help mitigate climate change. When deployed in agricultural soils in Germany, it has been found by Teichmann (2014a, b) that slowpyrolysis biochar from a wide variety ...

    2015| Isabel Teichmann
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1475 / 2015

    An Exact Solution Method for Binary Equilibrium Problems with Compensation and the Power Market Uplift Problem

    We propose a novel method to find Nash equilibria in games with binary decision variables by including compensation payments and incentive-compatibility constraints from non-cooperative game theory directly into an optimization framework in lieu of using first order conditions of a linearization, or relaxation of integrality conditions. The reformulation offers a new approach to obtain and interpret ...

    2015| Daniel Huppmann, Sauleh Siddiqui
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1474 / 2015

    About Attitudes and Perceptions: Finding the Proper Way to Consider Latent Variables in Discrete Choice Models

    We provide an in-depth theoretical discussion about the differences between attitudes and perceptions, as well as an empirical exercise to analyze its effects. This discussion is of importance, as the large majority of papers considering attitudinal latent variables, just consider those as attributes affecting directly the utility of a certain alternative while systematic taste variations are rarely ...

    2015| Francisco J. Bahamonde-Birke, Uwe Kunert, Heike Link, Juan de Dios Ortúzar
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1473 / 2015

    Work Creation and Rearmament in Germany 1933-1938: A Revisionist Assessment of NS-Economic Policy Based on Input-Output Analysis

    We try to measure the impact work creation programs and rearmament had on employment and production of the German economy before World War II. Theoretically based on an extended version of the conventional input-output analysis, our model or analytical framework integrates the Keynesian multiplier into Leontief´s traditional model. Empirically, we apply our recently presented input-output table of ...

    2015| Rainer Fremdling, Reiner Stäglin
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1472 / 2015

    The Potential of Electromobility in Austria: An Analysis Based on Hybrid Choice Models

    This paper analyses the impact of the introduction of electromobility in Austria, focusing specifically on the potential demand for electric vehicles in the automotive market. We estimate discrete choice behavioral mixture models considering latent variables; these allows us to deal with this potential demand as well as to analyze the effect of different attributes of the alternatives over the potential ...

    2015| Francisco J. Bahamonde-Birke, Tibor Hanappi
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1471 / 2015

    Market Power Rents and Climate Change Mitigation: A Rationale for Coal Taxes?

    In this paper we investigate the introduction of an export tax on steam coal levied by an individual country (Australia), or a group of major exporting countries. The policy motivation would be twofold: generating tax revenues against the background of improved terms-of-trade, while CO2 emissions are reduced. We construct and numerically apply a two-level game consisting of an optimal policy problem ...

    2015| Philipp M. Richter, Roman Mendelevitch, Frank Jotzo
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1470 / 2015

    A Profit-Maximizing Approach for Transmission Expansion Planning Using a Revenue-Cap Incentive Mechanism

    This paper proposes an incentive mechanism for transmission expansion planning. The mechanism is a bilevel program. The upper level is a profit-maximizing transmission company (Transco) which expands its transmission system while endogenously predicts and influences the generation investment. The lower level is the optimal generation dispatch and investment. The Transco funds its transmission investment ...

    2015| Mohammad Reza Hesamzadeh, Juan Rosellón, Steven A. Gabriel
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1469 / 2015

    Distributional and Behavioral Effects of the Gender Wage Gap

    The gender wage gap is a persistent labor market phenomenon. Most research focuses on the determinants of these wage differences. We contribute to this literature by exploring a different research question: if wages of women are systematically lower than male wages, what are the distributional consequences (disposable income) and what are the labor market effects (labor supply) of the wage gap? We ...

    2015| Patricia Gallego-Granados, Johannes Geyer
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1468 / 2015

    Optimal Social Assistance and Unemployment Insurance in a Life-Cycle Model of Family Labor Supply and Savings

    We analyze empirically the optimal design of social insurance and assistance programs when families obtain insurance by making labor supply choices for both spouses. For this purpose, we specify a structural life-cycle model of the labor supply and savings decisions of singles and married couples. Partial insurance against wage and employment shocks is provided by social programs, savings and the labor ...

    2015| Peter Haan, Victoria Prowse
2170 Ergebnisse, ab 681
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