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  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Correcting for Self-Selection Based Endogeneity in Management Research: Review, Recommendations and Simulations

    Foundational to management is the idea that organizational decisions are a function of expected outcomes; hence, the customary empirical approach to employ multivariate techniques that regress performance outcome variables on discrete measures of organizational choices (e.g., investments, trainings, strategies and other managerial decision variables) potentially suffer from self-selection based endogeneity ...

    In: Organizational Research Methods 19 (2016), 2, S. 286-347 | Joseph A. Clougherty, Tomaso Duso, Johannes Muck
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Why Are Chinese MNEs not Financially Competitive in Cross-Border Acquisitions? The Role of State-Ownership

    While MNEs from emerging markets — and China in particular — tend to pay high acquisition premiums when they engage in cross-border acquisition activity, the determinants of this overbidding are not completely understood. We argue that state ownership is a key factor in explaining the high acquisition premiums paid by emerging-market multinationals. Employing data on 450 Chinese outward cross-border ...

    In: Long Range Planning 49 (2016), 5, S. 614-631 | Wenxin Guo, Joseph A. Clougherty, Tomaso Duso
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    Wie viel Industrie braucht das Land?

    Die Fakten und Analysen zur Bedeutung der Industrie im internationalen Vergleich weisen eher nicht auf eine verallgemeinerbare Antwort auf die Frage hin, wie viel Industrie eine Volkswirtschaft braucht. Die angemessene oder – wenn man so will – optimale Bedeutung der Industrie lässt sich nur unter den spezifischen sektoralen und historischen Bedingungen eines Landes plausibilisieren. So dürfte die ...

    In: WSI-Mitteilungen 68 (2015), 7, S. 500-506 | Martin Gornig
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    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 individual-specific latent constructs (representing attitudes, for example, but also other characteristics such as values or personality traits) and alternative-specific latent constructs (that may represent perceptions) affecting the choice-making process of individuals; we also carry out an empirical exercise to analyze their ...

    In: Transportation : Planning, Policy, Research, Practice 44 (2017), 3, S. 475-493 | Francisco J. Bahamonde-Birke, Uwe Kunert, Heike Link, Juan de Dios Ortúzar
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Strategic Bidding in Multi-unit Auctions with Capacity Constrained Bidders: The New York Capacity Market

    This article employs a simple model to describe bidding behavior in multi-unit uniform price procurement auctions when firms are capacity constrained. Using data from the New York City procurement auctions for power generating capacity, I find that firms use simple bidding strategies to coordinate on an equilibrium that extracts high rents for all bidders. I show theoretically and empirically that ...

    In: Rand Journal of Economics 46 (2015), 4, S. 730-750 | Sebastian Schwenen
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    The Spatial Dimension of US House Prices

    Spatial heterogeneity and spatial dependence are two well established aspects of house price developments. However, the analysis of differences in spatial dependence across time and space has not gained much attention yet. This paper jointly analyses these three aspects of spatial data. A panel smooth transition regression model is applied that allows for heterogeneity across time and space in spatial ...

    In: Urban Studies 54 (2017), 2, S. 466-481 | Katharina Pijnenburg
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Does Experience Rating Improve Obstetric Practices? Evidence from Italy

    Using inpatient discharge records from the Italian region of Piedmont, we estimate the impact of an increase in malpractice pressure brought about by experience-rated liability insurance on obstetric practices. Our identification strategy exploits the exogenous location of public hospitals in court districts with and without schedules for noneconomic damages. We perform difference-in-differences analysis ...

    In: Health Economics 24 (2015), 9, S. 1050-1064 | Sofia Amaral-Garcia, Paola Bertoli, Veronica Grembi
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Evaluating Renewable Portfolio Standards for In-State Renewable Deployment: Accounting for Policy Heterogeneity

    Renewable portfolio standards (RPS) are the most common state-level policies for promoting renewable electricity in the United States. State RPS policies are heterogeneously designed, particularly with respect to their use of flexibility mechanisms that allow obligations to be met with renewable energy generated in other states. However, the renewable energy that is produced within an RPS-enacting ...

    In: Economics of Energy and Environmental Policy 4 (2105), No. 2, S. 127-142 | Gireesh Shrimali, Gabriel Chan, Steffen Jenner, Felix Groba, Joe Indvik
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Exercise at Different Ages and Appendicular Lean Mass and Strength in Later Life: Results from the Berlin Aging Study II

    Background. Excessive loss of muscle mass in advanced age is a major risk factor for decreased physical ability and falls. Physical activity and exercise training are typically recommended to maintain muscle mass and prevent weakness. How exercise in different stages of life relates to muscle mass, grip strength, and risk for weakness in later life is not well understood.Methods. Baseline data on 891 ...

    In: The Journals of Gerontology : Series A, Medical Sciences 71 (2016), 4, S. 515-520 | Peter Eibich, Nikolaus Buchmann, Martin Kroh, Gert G. Wagner, Elisabeth Steinhagen-Thiessen, Ilja Demuth, Kristina Norman
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    The Effects of Family Policy on Maternal Labor Supply: Combining Evidence from a Structural Model and a Quasi-experimental Approach

    Parental leave and subsidized child care are prominent examples of family policies supporting the reconciliation of family life and labor market careers for mothers. In this paper, we combine different empirical strategies to evaluate the employment effects of these policies for mothers with young children. In particular we estimate a structural labor supply model and exploit quasi-experimental variation ...

    In: Labour Economics 36 (2015), S. 84-98 | Johannes Geyer, Peter Haan, Katharina Wrohlich
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    The Decline in Average Family Size and Its Implications for the Average Benefits of Within-Household Sharing

    Economic policies rely on demographic projections. Yet in making these projections, researchers often ignore the aspect of household formation—despite sustained trends in many industrialized countries towards smaller household units with fewer members. Over the long term, this trend is likely to reduce the benefits of sharing goods/services within households (household economies of scale) at the micro-level, ...

    In: Oxford Economic Papers 67 (2015), 3, S. 760-780 | Carsten Schröder, Katrin Rehdanz, Daiju Narita, Toshihiro Okubo
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Housing Market Fundamentals, Housing Quality and Energy Consumption: Evidence from Germany

    This study investigates the relationship between regional housing market fundamentals and energy consumption. We argue that dwellings, in particularly rental properties, are not only consumer goods, but also constitute financial market assets. Properties are spatially fixed and traded in regional contexts, where real estate market characteristics like vacancy, income levels, and expectations determine ...

    In: The Energy Journal 37 (2016), 4, S. 25-43 | Marius Claudy, Claus Michelsen
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Financial Conditions, Macroeconomic Factors and Disaggregated Bond Excess Returns

    Bond excess returns can be predicted by macro factors, however, large parts remain still unexplained. We apply a novel term structure model to decompose bond excess returns into expected excess returns (risk premia) and the innovation part. In order to explore these risk premia and innovations, we complement macro variables by financial condition variables as possible determinants of bond excess returns. ...

    In: Journal of Banking & Finance 58 (2015), S. 80-94 | Christoph Fricke, Lukas Menkhoff
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    The Distribution of Crowding Costs in Public Transport: New Evidence from Paris

    Whilst congestion in automobile traffic increases trip durations, this is often not the case in rail-based public transport where congestion rather leads to in-vehicle crowding, often neglected in empirical studies. Using original survey data from Paris, this article assesses the distribution of comfort costs of congestion in public transport. Estimating willingness to pay for less crowded trips at ...

    In: Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice 77 (2015), 182-201 | Luke Haywood, Martin Koning
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Urban House Prices: A Tale of 48 Cities

    In this paper, the authors construct a unique data set of Internet offer prices for flats in 48 large European cities across 24 countries. The data collected between January and May 2012 from 33 websites, are drawn from Internet advertisements of dwellings. Using the resulting sample of more than 1,000,000 announcements, the authors compute the quality-adjusted city-specific house prices. Based on ...

    In: Economics 9 (2015), 2015-28, S. 1-43 | Konstantin A. Kholodilin, Dirk Ulbricht
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Bayesian Procedures as a Numerical Tool for the Estimation of an Intertemporal Discrete Choice Model

    Discrete choice models usually require a general specification of unobserved heterogeneity. In this paper, we apply Bayesian procedures as a numerical tool for the estimation of a female labor supply model based on a sample size that is typical for common household panels. We provide two important results for the practitioner: First, for a specification with a multivariate normal distribution for the ...

    In: Empirical Economics 49 (2015), 3, S. 1123-1141 | Peter Haan, Daniel Kemptner, Arne Uhlendorff
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    International Knowledge Spillovers through High-Tech Imports and R&D of Foreign-Owned Firms

    The international transmission of knowledge through import spillovers, as a source of Total Factor Productivity (TFP) growth, has received much attention in the literature. We investigate two additional direct channels through which R&D disseminates: the import of high-technology goods and the internationalization of business R&D. Building on an extensive data-set, covering both developing and industrial ...

    In: The Journal of International Trade & Economic Development 25 (2016), 4, S. 590-613 | Heike Belitz, Florian Mölders
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Financing Patterns of R&D in Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises and the Perception of Innovation Barriers in Germany

    We analyze the role public support plays in small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) R&D financing as well as these firms’ assessments of financing conditions in the context of other framework conditions for innovation. Using the sample of 2,708 German SMEs that participated in public R&D promotion programs during 2005–10, we identify four unique types of R&D financing. Firms are generally positive ...

    In: Science & Public Policy 43 (2016), 2, S. 245-261 | Heike Belitz, Anna Lejpras
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Small Might Be Beautiful, but Bigger Performs Better: Scale Economies in "Green" Refurbishments of Apartment Housing

    The energy efficiency of the residential housing stock plays a key role in strategies to mitigate climate change and global warming. In this context, it is frequently argued that private investment and the quality of thermal upgrades are too low in the light of the challenges faced and the potential energy cost savings. While many authors address the potential barriers for investors to increase energy ...

    In: Energy Economics 50 (2015), S. 240-250 | Claus Michelsen, Sebastian Rosenschon, Christian Schulz
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Confidence Bands for Impulse Responses: Bonferroni vs. Wald

    In impulse response analysis estimation uncertainty is typically displayed by constructing bands around estimated impulse response functions. If they are based on the joint asymptotic distribution possibly constructed with bootstrap methods in a frequentist framework, often individual confidence intervals are simply connected to obtain the bands. Such bands are known to be too narrow and have a joint ...

    In: Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics 77 (2015), 6, S. 800-821 | Helmut Lütkepohl, Anna Staszewska-Bystrova, Peter Winker
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