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Refereed essays Web of Science
We study the dynamic interaction between COVID-19, economic mobility, and containment policy. We use Bayesian panel structural vector autoregressions with daily data for 44 countries, identified through traditional and narrative sign restrictions. We find that incidence shocks and containment shocks have large and persistent effects on mobility, morbidity, and mortality that last for one to two months. ...
In:
American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics
15 (2023), 4, S. 217–248
| Annika Camehl, Malte Rieth
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Refereed essays Web of Science
Multivariate Adaptive Regression Spline (MARS) is a simple and powerful non-parametric machine learning algorithm that automatizes the selection of non-linear terms in regression models. In this study, we propose using MARS in a spatial regression framework to account for potential non-linearities and spatial effects in spatial regression models. Using a relatively large data set of 17,000 dwellings ...
In:
Papers in Regional Science
102 (2023), 4, S. 871-896
| Fernando A. López, Konstantin A. Kholodilin
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Refereed essays Web of Science
In:
International Journal of Housing Policy
23 (2023), 4, S. 671–691
| Konstantin A. Kholodilin, Sebastian Kohl
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Refereed essays Web of Science
We study the multifaceted effects of trade policy shocks on financial markets using a structural vector autoregression identified via event day heteroskedasticity. We find that restrictive US trade policy shocks affect US and international stock prices heterogeneously, but generally negatively. They increase market uncertainty, lower US interest rates, and lead to an appreciation of the US dollar. ...
In:
Journal of Applied Econometrics
38 (2023), 3, S. 388-406
| Lukas Boer, Lukas Menkhoff, Malte Rieth
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Refereed essays Web of Science
The long-run U-shaped patterns of economic inequality are standardly explained by basic economic trends (Piketty’s r > g), taxation policies or ‘great levellers’ such as catastrophes. This article argues that housing policy, and particularly rent control, is a neglected explanatory factor in understanding macro inequality. We hypothesize that rent control could decrease overall housing wealth, lower ...
In:
Journal of European Social Policy
33 (2023), 2, S. 169–184
| Konstantin A. Kholodilin, Sebastian Kohl
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Refereed essays Web of Science
Welfare is traditionally understood as social security decommodifying labour markets or as social investment policies. In the domain of housing, however, welfare for homeowners is largely hidden in the tax codes’ fiscal exemptions. Based on a content analysis of legislation, this article introduces a novel yearly database of 37 countries between 1901 and 2020 to uncover the “hidden welfare state” of ...
In:
Journal of Public Policy
43 (2023), 1, S. 86–114
| Konstantin A. Kholodilin, Sebastian Kohl, Artem Korzhenevych, Linus Pfeiffer
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Refereed essays Web of Science
The European Central Bank (ECB) is currently facing major challenges. Fragmentation of government bond yields across Member States of the European Economic and Monetary Union, based on different economic and fiscal policies, hampers a uniform transmission of monetary policy. At the same time, climate-related financial risks need to be addressed. In recent years, the ECB is meeting these challenges ...
In:
The Economists' Voice
20 (2023), 1, S. 111-118
| Kerstin Bernoth, Sara Dietz
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Refereed essays Web of Science
We develop a structural vector autoregressive framework that combines external instruments and heteroskedasticity for identification of monetary policy shocks. We show that exploiting both types of information sharpens structural inference, allows testing the relevance and exogeneity condition for instruments separately using likelihood ratio tests, and facilitates the economic interpretation of the ...
In:
Quantitative Economics
14 (2023), 1, S. 161-200
| Thore Schlaak, Malte Rieth, Maximilian Podstawski
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Refereed essays Web of Science
This paper studies market segmentation that arises from the introduction of rent control. When a part of the market remains unregulated, theory predicts an increase of free-market rents due to the misallocation of households to dwellings. To document this mechanism empirically, we study a large-scale policy intervention in the German housing market. We isolate the misallocation mechanism by exploiting ...
In:
Journal of Urban Economics
134 (2023), 103513, 22 S.
| Andreas Mense, Claus Michelsen, Konstantin A. Kholodilin
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Refereed essays Web of Science
In this paper, we investigate how European households changed the diversity of their financial portfolios in response to the Great Financial and the subsequent European Debt Crisis. For this purpose we apply a Difference-in-Differences (DiD) approach estimated as a correlated random effects (CRE) model to six waves of the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE). We find that households ...
In:
International Review of Economics and Finance
83 (2023), S. 330-347
| Dorothea Schäfer, Andreas Stephan, Henriette Weser