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  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    R&D Investments and Corporate Cash Holdings

    This paper presents evidence about how research and development (R&D) expenditures affect corporate cash holdings in European country groups that differ in their innovation capacity. In theory, one can expect intangible investments such as R&D to result in higher cash stocks than fixed investments, particularly because intangible capital is less suitable as collateral for obtaining external funds. ...

    In: Economics of Innovation and New Technology 27 (2018), 7, S.594-610 | Guido Baldi, André Bodmer
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Capital Taxation and Government Debt Policy with Public Discounting

    This paper characterizes capital taxation and public debt policy in a quantitative macroeconomic model with an impatient government and uncertainty. The government has access to linear taxes on capital and labor, and to non-state-contingent bonds. Government impatience generates positive and empirically realistic long-run levels of both capital taxes and public debt. Prior predictive analysis shows ...

    In: Journal of Economic Dynamics & Control 85 (2017), S. 1-20 | Malte Rieth
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Environmental Factors in Frontier Estimation – a Monte Carlo Analysis

    We compare three recently developed frontier estimators, namely the conditional DEA (Daraio and Simar, 2005; 2007b), the latent class SFA (Greene, 2005; Orea and Kumbhakar, 2004), and the StoNEZD approach (Johnson and Kuosmanen, 2011) by means of Monte Carlo simulation. We focus on their ability to identify production frontiers and efficiency rankings in the presence of environmental factors. Our simulations ...

    In: European Journal of Operational Research 265 (2018). 1, S. 133-148 | Maria Nieswand, Stefan Seifert
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Comparing Observed and Unobserved Components of Childhood: Evidence From Finnish Register Data on Midlife Mortality From Siblings and Their Parents

    In this study, we argue that the long arm of childhood that determines adult mortality should be thought of as comprising an observed part and its unobserved counterpart, reflecting the observed socioeconomic position of individuals and their parents and unobserved factors shared within a family. Our estimates of the observed and unobserved parts of the long arm of childhood are based on family-level ...

    In: Demography 55 (2018), 1, S. 295-318 | Hannes Kröger, Rasmus Hoffmann, Lasse Tarkiainen, Pekka Martikainen
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    How to Measure and Proxy Permanent Income: Evidence from Germany and the U.S.

    Permanent income (PI) is an enduring concept in the social sciences and is highly relevant to the study of inequality. Nevertheless, there has been insufficient progress in measuring PI. We calculate a novel measure of PI with the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) and U.S. Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID). Advancing beyond prior approaches, we define PI as the logged average of 20+ years of post-tax ...

    In: Journal of Economic Inequality 16 (2018),3, S. 321-345 | David Brady, Marco Giesselmann, Ulrich Kohler, Anke Radenacker
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    Grenzen der Technologieneutralität: Infrastrukturförderung als notwendiger Pull für den Übergang zur Elektromobilität

    In: Zeitschrift für Politikwissenschaft 27 (2018), 4, S. 483-491 | Claudia Kemfert, Carl-Friedrich Elmer, Miriam Dross
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Effectiveness of Early Retirement Disincentives: Individual Welfare, Distributional and Fiscal Implications

    In aging societies, information on how to reform pension systems is essential to policy makers. This study scrutinizes effects of early retirement disincentives on retirement behavior, individual welfare, pensions and public budget. We employ administrative pension data and a detailed model of the German tax and social security system to estimate a structural dynamic retirement model. We find that ...

    In: Labour Economics 51 (2018), S. 25-37 | Timm Bönke, Daniel Kemptner, Holger Lüthen
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    An Analysis of a Forward Capacity Market with Long-Term Contracts

    We analyze the effectiveness of a forward capacity market (FCM) with long-term contracts in an electricity market in the presence of a growing share of renewable energy. An agent-based model is used for this analysis. Capacity markets can compensate for the deteriorating incentive to invest in controllable power plants when the share of variable renewable energy sources grows, but may create volatile ...

    In: Energy Policy 111 (2017), S. 255-267 | Pradyumna C. Bhagwat, Anna Marcheselli, Jörn Richstein, Emile J. L. Chappin, Laurens J. de Vries
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Third Country Effects of Fiscal Devaluations

    We analyze fiscal devaluation in a three-country model. The introduction of the third country, outside a monetary union, increases the expansionary effect of fiscal devaluation and the second country of the monetary union experiences a boom instead of a recession.

    In: Economics Letters 163 (2018), S. 13-16 | Philipp Engler, Sandra Pasch, Juha Tervala
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Marginal Employment for Welfare Recipients: Stepping Stone or Obstacle?

    Marginal employment (ME) is one of the largest forms of atypical employment in Germany. We analyse whether ME has a ‘stepping stone’ function for unemployed individuals, i.e., whether ME increases the subsequent probability of regular employment. We find differing treatment effects by unemployment duration. According to our results, ME increases the likelihood of regular employment within a 3-year ...

    In: Labour 31 (2017), 4, S. 394-414 | Torsten Lietzmann, Paul Schmelzer, Jürgen Wiemers
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Will You Still Trust Me Tomorrow? The Causal Effect of Terrorism on Social Trust

    How do people respond to terrorist events? Exploiting the timing of the 2010 wave of the annual ‘Society Opinion Media’ survey in Sweden, we study the causal effect of the Stockholm bombings of 11 December 2010 on Swedish public opinion. Our main contribution is that we draw explicit attention to the link between terrorist events and individuals’ social trust. While we identify a strong effect on individuals’ ...

    In: Public Choice 173 (2017), 3-4, S. 289-305 | Benny Geys, Salmai Qari
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Long-Term Growth Perspectives in Japan and the Euro Area

    Euro area countries and Japan are confronted with similar challenges. Potential output is on a declining trend in the Euro area, and the decrease started well before the financial crisis. In Japan, low-output growth is a striking feature since many years, despite the unconventional monetary policy stance and numerous fiscal stimulus programs provided by the government. According to a growth accounting ...

    In: Asia Europe Journal 15 (2017), 4, S. 363-375 | Christian Dreger
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Electrification of a City Bus Network: An Optimization Model for Cost-Effective Placing of Charging Infrastructure and Battery Sizing of Fast-Charging Electric Bus Systems

    The deployment of battery-powered electric bus systems within the public transportation sector plays an important role in increasing energy efficiency and abating emissions. Rising attention is given to bus systems using fast charging technology. This concept requires a comprehensive infrastructure to equip bus routes with charging stations. The combination of charging infrastructure and bus batteries ...

    In: International Journal of Sustainable Transportation 11 (2017), 10, S. 707-720 | Alexander Kunith, Roman Mendelevitch, Dietmar Goehlich
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Analyzing the Continuity of Attitudinal and Perceptual Indicators in Hybrid Choice Models

    The main objective of this paper is to compare the consequences of treating the attitudinal and perceptual indicators of hybrid discrete choice (HDC) models as continuous or ordinal outcomes. Based on tradition and computational reasons, such indicators are still predominantly treated as continuous outcomes in practice. This usually neglects their nature (as respondents are normally asked to state ...

    In: Journal of Choice Modelling 25 (2017), S. 28-39 | Francisco J. Bahamonde-Birke, Juan de Dios Ortúzar
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Cross-Border Effects of Capacity Mechanisms in Interconnected Power Systems

    The cross-border effects of a capacity market and a strategic reserve in interconnected electricity markets are modeled using an agent-based modeling methodology. Both capacity mechanisms improve the security of supply and reduce consumer costs. Our results indicate that interconnections do not affect the effectiveness of a capacity market, while a strategic reserve is affected negatively. The neighboring ...

    In: Utilities Policy 46 (2017), S. 33-47 | Pradyumna C. Bhagwat, Jörn Richstein, Emile J. L. Chappin, Kaveri K. Iychettira, Laurens J. de Vries
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    The Effectiveness of Capacity Markets in the Presence of a High Portfolio Share of Renewable Energy Sources

    The effectiveness of a capacity market is analyzed by simulating three conditions that may cause suboptimal investment in the electricity generation: imperfect information and uncertainty; declining demand shocks resulting in load loss; and a growing share of renewable energy sources in the generation portfolio. Implementation of a capacity market can improve supply adequacy and reduce consumer costs. ...

    In: Utilities Policy 63 (2017), 9, S. 76-91 | Pradyumna C. Bhagwat, Kaveri K. Iychettira, Jörn Richstein, Emile J. L. Chappin, Laurens J. de Vries
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Parental Socio-Economic Status and Childcare Quality: Early Inequalities in Educational Opportunity?

    This study examines whether children from potentially disadvantaged families attend early childhood education and care (ECEC) centers of lower quality compared to more advantaged children in the universal and strongly state-subsidized ECEC system in Germany. We combine the representative German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) with the 2014 K2ID- SOEP extension study on ECEC quality. We run linear and logistic ...

    In: Early Childhood Research Quarterly 44 (2018), S. 304-317 | Juliane F. Stahl, Pia S. Schober, C. Katharina Spieß
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    The Relation between Religiosity and Muslims' Social Integration: A Two-Wave Study of Recent Immigrants in Three European Countries

    Does their degree of religiosity affect how successfully recent Muslim migrants integrate socially into the host society in terms of their social contacts with the majority population and their ethno-religious group? And/or do these co-ethnic and interethnic social contacts affect the religiosity of Muslim migrants over time? On the basis of a two-wave study among recent migrants in Germany, the Netherlands ...

    In: Ethnic and Racial Studies 41 (2018), 5, S. 860-881 | Mieke Maliepaard, Diana D. Schacht
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Credit Market Structure and Collateral in Rural Thailand

    This paper empirically examines reliance on collateral in different credit market segments—formal, semiformal and informal lending—of a developing rural financial market. Determinants of collateralization indicate that all three types of lenders price risk conventionally. Controlled for standard risk factors, however, formal lenders rely on collateral about 40 per cent more often than informal lenders. ...

    In: Economic Notes 46 (2017), 3, S. 587-632 | Carmen Kislat, Lukas Menkhoff, Doris Neuberger
  • Weitere referierte Aufsätze

    Germany and Poland in the Energy Union: Moving from Controversies to Shared Interests?

    In: European Energy Journal 7 (2017), 2, S. 49-59 | Aleksandra Gawlikowska-Fyk, Kai-Olaf Lang, Karsten Neuhoff, Ellen Scholl, Kirsten Westphal
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