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  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Determinants of Chinese Direct Investments in the European Union

    This article analyses the determinants of Chinese foreign direct investment (FDI) activities in the European Union (EU). Evidence is based on panel Poisson models drawing on two investment monitors at the individual project level. Greenfield investments (GI) and mergers and acquisitions (M&A) are distinguished. The findings indicate that market size and bilateral trade are the main factors for Chinese ...

    In: Applied Economics 49 (2017), 42, S. 4231-4240 | Christian Dreger, Yun Schüler-Zhou, Margot Schüller
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Risk Forecasting in (T)GARCH Models with Uncorrelated Dependent Innovations

    (G)ARCH-type models are frequently used for the dynamic modelling and forecasting of risk attached to speculative asset returns. While the symmetric and conditionally Gaussian GARCH model has been generalized in a manifold of directions, model innovations are mostly presumed to stem from an underlying IID distribution. For a cross section of 18 stock market indices, we notice that (threshold) (T)GARCH-implied ...

    In: Quantitative Finance 17 (2017), 1, S. 121-137 | Benjamin Beckers, Helmut Herwartz, Moritz Seidel
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Growing up with a Single Mother and Life Satisfaction in Adulthood: A Test of Mediating and Moderating Factors

    Single parenthood is increasingly common in Western societies but only little is known about its long-term effects. We therefore studied life satisfaction among 641 individuals (ages 18–66 years) who spent their entire childhood with a single mother, 1539 individuals who spent part of their childhood with both parents but then experienced parental separation, and 21,943 individuals who grew up with ...

    In: PloS one 12 (2017), 6, e0179639 | David Richter, Sakari Lemola
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Probing Birth-Order Effects on Narrow Traits Using Specification-Curve Analysis

    The idea that birth-order position has a lasting impact on personality has been discussed for the past 100 years. Recent large-scale studies have indicated that birth-order effects on the Big Five personality traits are negligible. In the current study, we examined a variety of more narrow personality traits in a large representative sample (n = 6,500–10,500 in between-family analyses; n = 900–1,200 ...

    In: Psychological Science 28 (2017),12, S. 1821-1832 | Julia M. Rohrer, Boris Egloff, Stefan C. Schmukle
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Fiscal Equalization and Tax Enforcement

    In many countries organized as federations, fiscal equalization schemes have been implemented to mitigate vertical or horizontal imbalances. Such schemes usually imply that the member states of the federation can only partly internalize (marginal) tax revenue before redistribution. Aside from the internalized marginal revenue, referred to as the marginal tax-back rate, the remainder is redistributed. ...

    In: German Economic Review 18 (2017), 3, S. 377-409 | Timm Bönke, Beate Jochimsen, Carsten Schröder
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    North American Natural Gas Model: Impact of Cross-Border Trade with Mexico

    Natural gas gained significant attention due to its low carbon emissions and competitive prices in North America relative to other energy sources. The Annual Energy Outlook 2015 projects the U.S. as a net exporter by 2017. Recently, Mexico launched its energy reform, aiming to expand domestic production by opening the market to private investors. The success or failure of these policy changes will ...

    In: Energy 112 (2016), S. 1084-1095 | Felipe Feijoo, Daniel Huppmann, Larissa Sakiyama, Sauleh Siddiqui
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Spillovers of U.S. Unconventional Monetary Policy to Emerging Markets: The Role of Capital Flows

    We employ a structural global VAR model to analyze whether U.S. unconventional monetary policy shocks, identified through changes in the central bank’s balance sheet, have an impact on financial and economic conditions in emerging market economies (EMEs). Moreover, we study whether international capital flows are an important channel of shock transmission. We find that an expansionary policy shock ...

    In: Journal of International Money and Finance 73 (2017), Part B., S. 275-295 | Pablo Anaya, Michael Hachula, Christian J. Offermanns
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Allais for the Poor: Relations to Ability, Information Processing, and Risk Attitudes

    This paper complements evidence on the Allais paradox from advanced countries and educated people by a novel investigation in a poor rural area. The share of Allais-type behavior is indeed high and related to indicators of “lacking ability,” such as poor education, unemployment, and little financial sophistication. Based on prospective reference theory, we extend these characteristics by biased processing ...

    In: Journal of Risk and Uncertainty 54 (2017), 2, S. 129-156 | Tabea Herrmann, Olaf Hübner, Lukas Menkhoff, Ulrich Schmidt
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    A Nod to Public Open Access Infrastructures

    In: Science 356 (2017), 6344, S. 1242 | Benedikt Fecher, Sascha Friesike, Gert G. Wagner
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Developing Better Measures of Neighbourhood Characteristics and Change for Use in Studies of Residential Mobility: A Case Study of Britain in the Early 2000s

    This paper addresses the problem of measuring neighbourhood characteristics and change when working with individual level datasets to understand the effects of residential mobility. Currently available measures in Britain are in various respects unsuitable for this purpose. The paper explores a new indicator of small area poverty: the Unadjusted Means-tested Benefits Rate (UMBR), which divides claimants ...

    In: Applied Spatial Analysis and Policy 9 (2016), 4, S. 569-590 | Ludovica Gambaro, Heather Joshi, Ruth Lupton, Alex Fenton, Mary Clare Lennon
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    A Reputation Economy: How Individual Reward Considerations Trump Systemic Arguments for Open Access to Data

    Open access to research data has been described as a driver of innovation and a potential cure for the reproducibility crisis in many academic fields. Against this backdrop, policy makers are increasingly advocating for making research data and supporting material openly available online. Despite its potential to further scientific progress, widespread data sharing in small science is still an ideal ...

    In: Palgrave Communications 3 (2017), 17051, S. 1-10 | Benedikt Fecher, Sascha Friesike, Marcel Hebing, Stephanie Linek
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    The Impact of Wind Power Support Schemes on Technology Choices

    In energy systems with large shares of variable renewable energies, electricity generation is lower during unfavorable weather conditions. System-friendly wind turbines (SFTs) rectify this by producing a larger share of their electricity at low wind speeds. This paper analyzes to what extent SFTs' benefits out-weigh their additional costs and how to incentivize investments into them. Using a wind power ...

    In: Energy Economics 65 (2017), S. 343-354 | Nils May
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    The Role of Morbidity for Proxy-Reported Well-Being in the Last Year of Life

    Late-life well-being often shows steep deteriorations, but the contributing factors are not well understood, in part because data about people’s final year of life are scarce. Here, we draw from and test theoretical perspectives that health-related vulnerabilities undermine the experience and skills older adults typically use to maintain well-being (Charles, 2010). To do so, we examined how various ...

    In: Developmental Psychology 53 (2017), 9, S. 1795-1809 | Katharina Gerlach, Nilam Ram, Frank J. Infurna, Nina Vogel, Gert G. Wagner, Denis Gerstorf
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Replikationen, Reputation und gute wissenschaftliche Praxis

    In Zeiten wachsender Publikationszahlen und zunehmend datenintensiver Forschung stoßen die klassischen Qualitätssicherungsmaßnahmen, wie die Peer-Review, an ihre Grenzen. Vor diesem Hintergrund werden Replikationsstudien verstärkt als gute wissenschaftliche Praxis und Lösungsansatz diskutiert, um dem Problem methodisch unzureichender und oftmals fehlerbehafteter Analysen zu begegnen. Denn schlechte ...

    In: Information, Wissenschaft & Praxis 68 (2017), 2, S. 154-158 | Benedikt Fecher, Mathis Fräßdorf, Marcel Hebing, Gert G. Wagner
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Pension Incentives and Early Retirement

    In this paper we exploit a cohort-specific pension reform to estimate the labour market effects of changes in the financial incentives to retire. In particular, we analyse the effects of the introduction of cohort-specific deductions for early retirement on female retirement, employment and unemployment. For the empirical analysis we use high-quality administrative data from the German pension insurance. ...

    In: Labour Economics 47 (2017), S. 216-231 | Barbara Engels, Johannes Geyer, Peter Haan
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    Zunehmende Armut in Deutschland: Empirisch gesichertes Faktum oder Mythos?

    Trotz bisweilen dramatisierender Berichterstattung verläuft die Armutsquote in Deutschland zwischen 2008 und 2013 weitgehend konstant. Die minimalen Schwankungen, die einige Analysen anzeigen, sind nach statistischen und wissenschaftlichen Kriterien kaum belastbar. Sie beruhen zudem dem umstrittenen Standardindikator zur Messung von Armut. Sie halten einer Überprüfung auf Grundlage alternativer Messarten ...

    In: Gesellschaft, Wirtschaft, Politik 66 (2017), 1, S. 71-81 | Marco Giesselmann, Laura Luekemann
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    The Stratifying Role of Job Level for Sickness Absence and the Moderating Role of Gender and Occupational Gender Composition

    The study investigates whether sickness absence is stratified by job level - understood as the authority and autonomy a worker holds – beyond the association with education, income, and occupation. A second objective is to establish the moderating role of gender and occupational gender composition on this stratification of sickness absence. Four competing hypotheses are developed that predict different ...

    In: Social Science & Medicine 186 (2017), S. 1-9 | Hannes Kröger
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Getting Together: Social Contact Frequency across the Life Span

    Frequent social interactions are strongly linked to positive affect, longevity, and good health. Although there has been extensive research on changes in the size of social networks over time, little attention has been given to the development of contact frequency across the life span. In this cohort-sequential longitudinal study, we examined intraindividual changes in the frequency of social contact ...

    In: Developmental Psychology 53 (2017), 8, S. 1571-1588 | Julia Sander, Jürgen Schupp, David Richter
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Crowding in Public Transport: Who Cares and Why?

    Crowding on public transport (PT) is a major issue for commuters around the world. Nevertheless, economists have rarely investigated the causes of crowding discomfort. Furthermore, most evidence on the costs of PT crowding is based on trade-offs between crowding, travel time and money. First, this paper assesses discomfort with PT crowding at various density levels across heterogeneous individuals ...

    In: Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice 100 (2017), S. 215-227 | Luke Haywood, Martin Koning, Guillaume Monchambert
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Not Just Any Child Care Center? Social and Ethnic Disparities in the Early Education Institutions with a Beneficial Learning Environment

    This study investigates social and ethnic differences in the use of early childhood education and care (ECEC) centers with different learning environments in an ECEC system with universal state-subsidized provision and low fees. Based on the German National Educational Panel Study—Kindergarten Cohort from 2011, we matched data on 587 groups in 253 ECEC centers with information on about 1,700 children ...

    In: Early Education and Development 28 (2017), 8, S. 1011-1034 | Birgit Becker, Pia S. Schober
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