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  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Endogenous Production Capacity Investment in Natural Gas Market Equilibrium Models

    The large-scale natural gas equilibrium model applied in Egging, 2013 combines long-term market equilibria and investments in infrastructure while accounting for market power by certain suppliers. Such models are widely used to simulate market outcomes given different scenarios of demand and supply development, environmental regulations and investment options in natural gas and other resource markets.. ...

    In: European Journal of Operational Research 231 (2013), 2, S. 503-506 | Daniel Huppmann
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Meet the Parents? Family Size and the Geographic Proximity between Adult Children and Older Mothers in Sweden

    The aim of this study is to estimate the causal effect of family size on the proximity between older mothers and adult children by using a large administrative data set from Sweden. Our main results show that adult children in Sweden are not constrained by sibship size in choosing where to live: for families with more than one child, sibship size does not affect child-mother proximity. For aging parents, ...

    In: Demography 50 (2013), 3, S. 903-931 | Helena Holmlund, Helmut Rainer, Thomas Siedler
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Effizienzanalysen frühkindlicher Bildungs- und Betreuungsprogramme: das Beispiel von Kosten-Nutzen-Analysen

    In social science literature there is a wide range of effectiveness studies for early education and care programmes for young children. But these studies usually distinguish the effects of these programmes without considering their costs. This is where efficiency analysis studies in Economics begin. This article presents three fundamental approaches to efficiency analysis before looking in more detail ...

    In: Zeitschrift für Erziehungswissenschaft 16 (2013), 2, S. 333-354 | C. Katharina Spieß
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Validating an Ultra-Short Survey Measure of Patience

    This study presents results of the validation of an ultra-short survey measure of patience included in the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP). Survey responses predict intertemporal choice behavior in incentive-compatible decisions in a representative sample of the German adult population.

    In: Economics Letters 120 (2013), 2, S. 142-145 | Thomas Vischer, Thomas Dohmen, Armin Falk, David Huffman, Jürgen Schupp, Uwe Sunde, Gert G. Wagner
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    The Effect of Unemployment on the Mental Health of Spouses: Evidence from Plant Closures in Germany

    Studies on health effects of unemployment usually neglect spillover effects on spouses. This study specifically investigates the effect of an individual's unemployment on the mental health of their spouse. In order to allow for causal interpretation of the estimates, it focuses on plant closure as entry into unemployment, and combines difference-in-difference and matching based on entropy balancing ...

    In: Journal of Health Economics 32 (2013), 3, S. 546-558 | Jan Marcus
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Effective Taxation of Top Incomes in Germany

    We exploit a dataset that includes the individual tax returns of all taxpayers in the top percentile of the income distributionin Germany to pin down the effective income taxation of households with very high incomes. Taking tax base erosion intoaccount, we find that the top percentile of the income distribution pays an effective average tax rate of 30.5% and contributes more than a quarter of total ...

    In: German Economic Review 14 (2013), 2, S. 115-137 | Stefan Bach, Giacomo Corneo, Viktor Steiner
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Collusion through Joint R&D: An Empirical Assessment

    This paper tests whether upstream R&D cooperation leads to downstream collusion. We show that a sufficient condition for identifying collusive behavior is a decline in the market share of RJV-participating firms. Using information from the U.S. National Cooperation Research Act, we estimate a market share equation correcting for the endogeneity of RJV participation and R&D expenditures. We find robust ...

    In: The Review of Economics and Statistics 96 (2014), 2, S. 349-370 | Tomaso Duso, Lars-Hendrik Röller, Jo Seldeslachts
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Competition Policy and Productivity Growth: An Empirical Assessment

    This paper estimates the impact of competition policy on total factor productivity (TFP) growth for 22 industries in 12 OECD countries over 1995-2005. We find a positive and significanteffect of competition policy as measured by newly created indexes. We provide results based on instrumental variables estimators and heterogeneous effects to support the causal nature of the established link. The effect ...

    In: The Review of Economics and Statistics 95 (2013), 4, S. 1324-1336 | Paolo Buccirossi, Lorenzo Ciari, Tomaso Duso, Giancarlo Spagnolo, Cristiana Vitale
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Early Childhood Education Activities and Care Arrangements of Disadvantaged Children in Germany

    We examine how children aged zero to 6 years with migration background and those who live with lone parents, or on low income or social assistance differ from other less disadvantaged groups in their use of formal ECEC services and non-formal education activities. Previous studies have shown that attendance rates are lower for children in some of these groups, who might benefit disproportionately from ...

    In: Child Indicators Research 6 (2013), 4, S. 709-735 | Pia S. Schober, C. Katharina Spieß
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    SHARELIFE - One Century of Life Histories in Europe

    Welfare state interventions shape our life courses in almost all of their multiply linked domains. In this introduction, we sketch how cross-nationally comparative retrospective data can be fruitfully employed to better understand these links and the long-run effects of the welfare state at the same time. We briefly introduce SHARE, the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe, and SHARELIFE, ...

    In: Advances in Life Course Research 18 (2013), 1, S. 1-4 | Axel Börsch-Supan, Martina Brandt, Mathis Schröder
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Spillover Effects of Maternal Education on Child's Health and Health Behavior

    This study investigates the effects of maternal education on child's health and health behavior. We draw on a rich German panel data set containing information about three generations. This allows instrumenting maternal education by the number of her siblings while conditioning on grandparental characteristics. The instrumental variables approach has not yet been used in the intergenerational context ...

    In: Review of Economics of the Household 11 (2013), 1, S. 29-54 | Daniel Kemptner, Jan Marcus
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    Distributional Effects of Energy Transition: Impacts of Renewable Electricity Support in Germany

    The discussion of the support for renewable energy must consider the distributional impact of cost allocation. The public is sensitive to social imbalances caused by rising power prices that might jeopardize the acceptance of energy transformation. By the end of 2012 about 19 percent of German power is produced with renewables other than hydropower. As a result, German consumers will pay for global ...

    In: Economics of Energy and Environmental Policy 2 (2013), 1, S. 41-54 | Karsten Neuhoff, Stefan Bach, Jochen Diekmann, Martin Beznoska, Tarik El-Laboudy
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Evaluating Continuous Training Programmes by Using the Generalized Propensity Score

    The paper assesses the heterogeneity of treatment effects arising from variation in the duration of training. We use German administrative data that have the extraordinary feature that the amount of treatment varies continuously from 10 days to 395 days (i.e. 13 months). This feature allows us to estimate a continuous dose-response function that relates each value of the dose, i.e. days of training, ...

    In: Journal of the Royal Statistical Society / Series A 175 (2013), Part 2, S. 567-617 | Jochen Kluve, Hilmar Schneider, Arne Uhlendorff, Zhong Zhao
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Household Survey Data for Research on Well-Being and Behavior in Central Asia

    This paper summarizes the micro-level survey evidence from Central Asia generated and analyzed in the period 1992-2012. We provide an exhaustive overview over all accessible individual and household-level surveys undertaken inKazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan - and of all academic papers published using these datasets. We argue that Central Asia is a fascinating region ...

    In: Journal of Comparative Economics 42 (2014), 3, S. 819-835 | Tilman Brück, Damir Esenaliev, Antje Kröger, Alma Kudebayeva, Bakhrom Mirkasimov, Susan Steiner
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    In-Sample and Out-of-Sample Prediction of Stock Market Bubbles: Cross-Sectional Evidence

    We evaluate the informational content of ex post and ex ante predictors of periods of excess stock (market) valuation. For a cross-section comprising 10 OECD economies and a time span of at most 40 years, alternative binary chronologies of price bubble periods are determined. Using these chronologies as dependent processes and a set of macroeconomic and financial variables as explanatory variables, ...

    In: Journal of Forecasting 33 (2014), 1, S. 15-31 | Helmut Herwartz, Konstantin A. Kholodilin
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    An Early Warning System to Predict Speculative House Price Bubbles

    In this paper, the authors construct country-specific chronologies of the house price bubbles for 12 OECD countries over the period 1969:Q1-2009:Q4. These chronologies are obtained using a combination of a fundamental approach and a filter approach. The resulting speculative bubble chronology is the one which provides the highest concordance between these two techniques. In addition, the authors suggest ...

    In: Economics 7 (2013), 9, 26 S. | Christian Dreger, Konstantin A. Kholodilin
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Forecasting Life Satisfaction across Adulthood: Benefits of Seeing a Dark Future?

    Anticipating one's future self is a unique human capacity that contributes importantly to adaptation and health throughout adulthood and old age. Using the adult life span sample of the national German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP; N > 10,000, age range 18 to 96 years), we investigated age-differential stability, correlates, and outcomes of accuracy in anticipation of future life satisfaction across ...

    In: Psychology and Aging 28 (2013), 1, S. 249-261 | Frieder R. Lang, Denis Gerstorf, David Weiss, Gert G. Wagner
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Check Verbraucherpolitik und Verbraucherbeteiligung: Empfehlungen für eine evidenzbasierte Verbraucherpolitik

    The paper discusses the opportunities for an empirically grounded decision support system as an instrument for independent and scientifically based consumer policy consulting. To date, consumer policy is dominated by the information paradigm and the leitbild of the rational, sovereign and information-seeking consumer. Yet, both everyday practice and research in behavioural economics show that this ...

    In: Journal für Verbraucherschutz und Lebensmittelsicherheit 8 (2013), 1/2, S. 61-66 | Kornelia Hagen, Hans-W. Micklitz, Andreas Oehler, Lucia A. Reisch, Christoph Strünck
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Individual Differences in Social Comparison and Its Consequences for Life Satisfaction: Introducing a Short Scale of the Iowa-Netherlands Comparison Orientation Measure

    Research in social psychology has shown individual variation in the tendency to compare one's own opinions and abilities with those of other people, raising the question of whether social comparisons are psychological dispositions. To test the empirical validity of this proposition, Gibbons and Buunk (1999) created an instrument, the Iowa-Netherlands Comparison Orientation Measure (INCOM), that measures ...

    In: Social Indicators Research 115 (2014), 2, S. 767-789 | Simone M. Schneider, Jürgen Schupp
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Intertemporal Labor Supply and Involuntary Unemployment

    We estimate a model of intertemporal male labor supply behavior which explicitly accounts for the effect of income taxation and the transfer system. Moreover, we model the demand-side driven rationing risk that prevents agents from choosing the optimal labor supply state. Our results show that elasticities derived in an unconstrained pure choice model are significantly higher compared to a model with ...

    In: Empirical Economics 44 (2013), 2, S. 661-683 | Peter Haan, Arne Uhlendorff
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