Podcasts about ddc:330

  • 10PODCASTS
  • 867EPISODES
  • AVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Nov 10, 2016LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024

Categories



Best podcasts about ddc:330

Latest podcast episodes about ddc:330

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Operational Hedging of Exchange Rate Risks

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2016


Exchange rate exposure of firms diminishes when imported intermediates and exports are denominated in currencies that move together. Appreciations of the domestic currency, raising foreign currency export prices, then also reduce marginal costs, allowing firms to counter the increase in foreign prices. Using firm-level data from seven European countries I estimate a structural model showing how exchange rate pass-through into sales depends on intermediate imports and the co-movement of export and import related exchange rates. I find that operational hedging requires firms to intentionally choose export and import regions with comoving currencies. Analyzing the locational choice of firms confirms that the co-movement of currencies indeed appears to be taken into consideration

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Import Competition and the Composition of Firm Investments

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2016


We study how foreign competition affects the composition of investments inside firms. A parsimonious model predicts that firms have an incentive to shift their investments towards more short-term assets when exposed to tougher competition. Using data on expenditures of listed US companies into various asset classes with different lifespans, we document empirical evidence that is consistent with this prediction. Over a fifteen year period between 1995 and 2009, the rise in import competition is associated with a reduction of the firm-specific asset lifespan by about 4.5% on average. We additionally exploit the Chinese WTO accession as an exogenous shock in firm expectations about future exposure to competition.

competition investments firm import volkswirtschaft ddc:330 munich discussion papers in economics
Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Hans Albert hat in einigen Arbeiten den apriorischen Charakter des „neoklassischen Denkstils” kritisiert und treffend als „Modellplatonismus” bezeichnet. Die apriorische Denkhaltung findet sich aber nicht nur in der von Albert kritisierten Neoklassik, sondern vielleicht noch ausgeprägterer bei vielen modellfeindlichen Theoretikern, wie etwa den Österreichern, den Ordnungstheoretikern, den Vertretern der „constitutional economics” oder manchen neueren Vertretern der sozialen Marktwirtschaft. Es erscheint mir deshalb sinnvoll, dem Begriff „Modellplatonismus” den Begriff „Ordnungsplatonismus” an die Seite zu stellen. Die folgenden Bemerkungen sollen diese Kritik etwas erläutern.

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Information Technology and Global Sourcing

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2016


This paper examines how IT influences global sourcing decisions. It develops a theoretical model to study how IT determines the decisions of firms located in the high-wage North whether to offshore production to a low-wage country in the South. Offshoring to South however is subject to costly communication reflected by partially incomplete contracting. More sophisticated IT allows more efficient communication between the Northern headquarter and its Southern intermediate input supplier and alleviates contractual frictions. The model provides several predictions about the impact of IT on the organization of the global supply chain. Complex industries for which codifiability and verifiability of information is a much harder task, are more likely to source intermediate inputs in countries with more efficient IT infrastructure. Considering the mode of firm organization, more efficient IT infrastructure is expected to reduce the share of intra-firm trade in more complex industries. These predictions are examined and validated using disaggregated industry-level trade data. Most importantly, these findings are robust to controlling for well-known sources of comparative advantage and determinants of firm organization such as factor endowments, financial development and contract enforcement.

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Multinational banks: Supranational resolution regimes and the importance of capital regulation

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2016


The lack of coordination in the resolution of multinational banks has led to demands for the increased centralization of resolution regimes. However, as this paper argues, the anticipation of resolution procedures affects the incentives of host countries to impose capital standards on their resident banks. Critically, it is shown that overall welfare can even be decreased by introducing a centralized resolution regime without fully centralizing capital requirements. As, in the aftermath of the financial crisis, only countries that are not part of a supranational resolution regime unilaterally and significantly increased the capital requirements for their largest resident banks, this paper can help to understand and study the heterogeneity of the observed regulatory approaches.

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU
Essays on credit frictions and firm heterogeneity in international trade

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2016


Tue, 26 Apr 2016 12:00:00 +0100 https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/19464/ https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/19464/1/Unger_Florian.pdf Unger, Florian ddc:330, ddc:300, Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultä

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Temporary Agency Work and the Great Recession

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2016


We investigate with German data how the use of temporary agency work has helped establishments to manage the economic and financial crisis in 2008/09. We examine the (regular) workforce development, use of short-time work, and business performance of establishments that made differential use of temporary agency work prior to the crisis. Overall, our results suggest that establishments with a greater use of temporary agency work coped better with the sharp decline in demand and made less frequent use of government-sponsored short-time work schemes.

german agency temporary great recession volkswirtschaft ddc:330 munich discussion papers in economics
Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Optimal Policies against Profit Shifting: The Role of Controlled-Foreign-Company Rules

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2016


By introducing controlled-foreign-company (CFC) rules, the parent country of a multinational firm reserves the right to tax the income of the firm's foreign affiliates if the tax rate in the affiliate's host country is below a specified threshold. We identify the conditions under which binding CFC rules are part of the optimal tax mix when governments can set the statutory tax rate, a thin capitalization rule and the CFC rule. We also analyze the effects of economic and financial integration on the optimal policy mix. Our results correspond to the actual development of anti-avoidance rules in OECD countries.

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Cooperating over losses and competing over gains: a social dilemma experiment

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2016


Evidence from studies in international relations, the politics of reform, collective action and price competition suggests that economic agents in social dilemma situations cooperate more to avoid losses than in the pursuit of gains. To test whether the prospect of losses can induce cooperation, we let experimental subjects play the traveler’s dilemma in the gain and loss domain. Subjects cooperate substantially more over losses. Our experimental design allows us to show that this treatment effect is best explained by reference-dependent risk preferences and referencedependent strategic sophistication. We discuss policy implications and relate our findings to other experimental games played in the loss domain.

experiments losses competing social dilemma subjects cooperating volkswirtschaft ddc:330 munich discussion papers in economics verhaltenswissenschaftliche Ökonomik
Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Regulatory competition in capital standards with selection effects among banks

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2016


Several countries have recently introduced national capital standards exceeding the internationally coordinated Basel III rules, thus suggesting a `race to the top' in capital standards. We study regulatory competition when banks are heterogeneous and give loans to firms that produce output in an integrated market. In this setting capital requirements change the pool quality of banks in each country and inflict negative externalities on neighboring jurisdictions by shifting risks to foreign taxpayers and by reducing total credit supply and output. Non-cooperatively set capital standards are higher than coordinated ones when governments care equally about bank profits, taxpayers, and consumers.

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Unleashing Animal Spirits - Self-Control and Overpricing in Experimental Asset Markets

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 29, 2016


One possible determinant of overpricing on asset markets is a lack of self-control abilities of traders. Self-control is the individual capacity to override or inhibit undesired behavioral tendencies such as impulses and to refrain from acting on them. We implement the first experiment that is able to address a potential causal relationship between self-control abilities and systematic overpricing on financial markets by introducing an exogenous variation of self-control abilities. Our experimental conditions seek to detect some of the channels through which individual self-control problems could transmit into irrational exuberance on the aggregate level. We observe a strong effect of inhibited self-control abilities on market overpricing. Our findings are furthermore robust to reducing self-control abilities only for a moderate share of traders in a market. Low self-control traders engage in more speculative behavior early on, but because others imitate their trading patterns, they do not end up earning less and are not driven out of the market.

Fakultät für Psychologie und Pädagogik - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU
Socioeconomic status and vascular diseases in the INVADE study

Fakultät für Psychologie und Pädagogik - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2016


Wed, 27 Jan 2016 12:00:00 +0100 https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/19171/ https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/19171/1/Mentz_Hannah.pdf Mentz, Hannah ddc:610, ddc:600, ddc:330, ddc:300, Fakultät für Psychologie und Pädagogik

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Review of "Cultures Merging" by Eric Jones

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2016


This is an electronic reprint of a review of the book "Cultures Merging: A Historical and Economic Critique of Culture" by Eric L. Jones, Princeton: Princeton University Press that appeared in the Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics 2007, vol. 163, issue 3, pages 526-529, URL url{http://www.jstor.org/stable/40752660}.

culture journal cultures merging institutional volkswirtschaft eric jones eric l ddc:330 ddc:940 munich discussion papers in economics ddc:950
Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

This is an electronic reprint of the second chapter of the book "On Custom in the Economy" by Ekkehart Schlicht that has been published in 1998 by the Clarendon Press, Oxford. The chapter focusses on the behavioral entailments of concluding a contract.

economy oxford obligations entitlements clarendon press ddc:330 munich discussion papers in economics verhaltenswissenschaftliche Ökonomik
Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
The Impact of Self-Control on Investment Decisions

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2016


This paper explores how reduced self-control affects individual investment behavior in two laboratory tasks. For this purpose, I exogenously reduce subjects’ self-control using a well-established psychological treatment. In each task, I find no significant main treatment effect, but secondary effects consistent with findings on self-control from other studies and self-control’s potential relevance in financial markets. In experiment 1, I find no significant change in the disposition effect following the manipulation. However, treated participants trade fewer different shares per round. In experiment 2, I look at the effect of self-control on myopic loss aversion by implementing a 2×2 design by varying investment horizon and self-control in a repeated lottery environment. Average behavior suggests that reduced self-control increases framing effects, but I cannot reject the null hypothesis of equal investment levels between the self-control treatments within each investment frame. Analyzing the dynamics of decision making in more detail, self-control depleted participants in the narrow frame reduce their investment levels on average over time which seems to be driven by more intense reactions to investment experiences.

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Capital Adjustment Costs: Implications for Domestic and Export Sales Dynamics

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2015


Theoretical and empirical work on export dynamics has generally assumed constant marginal production cost and therefore ignored domestic product market conditions. However, recent studies have documented a negative correlation between firms' do- mestic and export sales growth, suggesting that firms can be capacity constrained in the short run and face increasing marginal production cost. This paper develops and estimates a dynamic model of export behavior incorporating short-term capacity con- straints and endogenous capital investment. Consistent with the empirical evidence, the model features firms' sales substitutions across markets in the short term, and generates time-varying transition paths of firm responses through firms' capital adjust- ments over time. The model is fit to a panel of plant-level data for Colombian manufacturing indus- tries and used to simulate how firm responses transition following an exchange-rate devaluation. The results indicate that incorporating capital adjustment costs is quan- titatively important, as shown by the length of the transition period, and the difference between the short-run and long-run exchange rate elasticity of exports. Firms' expeca- tion on the permanence of the policy changes also matters.

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU

Wed, 4 Nov 2015 12:00:00 +0100 https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18931/ https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18931/1/Grundke_Robert.pdf Grundke, Robert ddc:330, ddc:300, Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU
Education, immmigration, and economic development

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2015


Wed, 4 Nov 2015 12:00:00 +0100 https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18892/ https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18892/1/Semrad_Alexandra.pdf Semrad, Alexandra ddc:330, ddc:300, Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU

Wed, 4 Nov 2015 12:00:00 +0100 https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18827/ https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18827/1/Aresin_Sabine.pdf Aresin, Sabine ddc:330, ddc:300, Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät

development mechanism ddc:300 ddc:330
Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU

Wed, 4 Nov 2015 12:00:00 +0100 https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18843/ https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18843/1/Alvarez_Villa_Daphne.pdf Alvarez Villa, Daphne ddc:330, ddc:300, Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU
Regulatory competition, banks, and the real economy

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2015


Wed, 4 Nov 2015 12:00:00 +0100 https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18871/ https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18871/1/Maier_Ulf.pdf Maier, Ulf ddc:330, ddc:300, Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU
Firm behaviour under uncertainty and legal challenges

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2015


Wed, 4 Nov 2015 12:00:00 +0100 https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18888/ https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18888/1/Belsunce_Henri_de.pdf Belsunce, Henri de ddc:330, ddc:300, Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Do flexible repayment schedules improve the impact of microcredit? Evidence from a randomized evaluation in rural India

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2015


Microcredit institutions typically apply rigid and fixed repayment schedules when disbursing loans in order to reduce transaction costs, simplify procedures, and inculcate fiscal discipline for better repayment behavior. Microcredit clients, however, often have neither smooth income nor singular moments in which to make lumpy investments throughout the year. This mismatch generates a cash flow disconnect and, given the presumed liquidity constraints of the typical microcredit client, a potential welfare loss. Using data from a randomized evaluation with dairy farmers in rural India, we test the impact of flexible microcredit repayment schedules relative to "normal" inflexible, fixed repayment schedules. Although we are only able to track those who borrow, which introduces potential selection effects, we find amongst those in flexible lending groups some evidence for higher ability to absorb shocks and higher income, which seems to be driven by limited improvements in investment and higher production from milk. On the cost-side, defaults do increase for the lender. Towards the end of the study, the microcredit market encountered crisis, with mass defaults, thus it is hard to generalize with respect to the default results. We conclude with caution, that we have shown suggestive evidence that a more flexible product design, one tailored to the needs of a dairy farmer, may be welfare enhancing for the dairy farmer. Further work is needed to both validate these results, and explore how to balance any trade-off with default.

evaluation flexible schedules repayment randomized volkswirtschaft rural india microcredit ddc:330 seminar für wirtschaftstheorie munich discussion papers in economics
Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU

The present work contributes to the literature on uncertainty by using empirical methods to measure uncertainty and volatility, and empirical and theoretical methods to analyze two transmission channels through which uncertainty is linked to the business cycle. The first chapter looks into the problem of measuring inflation uncertainty and proposes to use common information contained in a variety of different uncertainty proxies. In the second chapter, we develop measures of firm-specific volatility and quantify the effect of heightened volatility on the price setting behavior of firms and analyze whether this link changes the effectiveness of monetary policy. The third chapter compares the effects of heightened idiosyncratic uncertainty on credit spreads in bank-based and market-based financial systems.

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU

Thu, 22 Oct 2015 12:00:00 +0100 https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/19004/ https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/19004/1/Kauppinen_Ilpo.pdf Kauppinen, Ilpo ddc:330, ddc:300, Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
How trust in social dilemmas evolves with age

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2015


While trust and trustworthiness provide a fundamental foundation for human relationships, little is known about how trusting and trustworthy behavior in social dilemmas is related to age and aging. A few papers use data from surveys such as the World Values Survey to address a potential connection between trust and age. In this chapter, we will mainly focus on trusting and trustworthy behavior elicited with the use of the seminal trust game (Berg et al., 1995) and with games implementing a similar incentivized interaction structure. The results suggest that trust and trustworthiness increase with young age until adolescence. Trustworthiness reaches the level of adults at an earlier age (at around 15-16 years of age) than trusting behavior (around adulthood). Survey results differ from incentivized experiments when it comes to a potential development of trust in adulthood. The former indicate a steady rise in trust levels at a small rate when becoming older, whereas the latter show a decline, starting at an age of about 60 years.

trust social survey berg dilemmas trustworthiness evolves world values survey ddc:330 mikroökonomik
Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Educational expansion and social composition of secondary schools: evidence from Bavarian school registries 1810-1890

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2015


This paper studies the relationship between social class, educational attainment, and social mobility. While educational expansion has been shown to increase educational attainment and social mobility in contemporary countries, the 19th century has received little attention. The German state of Bavaria experienced an enormous expansion of secondary education in the course of the 19th century, also due to the introduction of modern secondary education (Gewerbeschule). In this context, it is asked whether educational expansion (1) led to changes in the association between social class and educational attainment, and especially so after the introduction of the Gewerbeschule; (2) weakened the link between social class of origin (father’s occupation) and class of destination (son’s occupation) and thereby increased social mobility? Employing a unique dataset based on annual school reports of 21 Bavarian cities covering the 19th century, the analysis of occupational background information on students by the use of HISCO/HISCLASS reveals that introduction of the Gewerbeschule increased self-selection of the upper class into traditional and the middle class into modern education. Even though educational expansion did not increase participation of lower social classes, the prospect of social mobility for underprivileged classes was high especially in the Gymnasium.

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
'You must not know about me' - On the willingness to share personal data

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2015


Although understanding preferences for privacy is of great importance to economists, businesses and politicians little is known about the factors that shape the individual willingness to share personal data. This article provides three experimental studies with a total of 470 participants that help characterizing individual preferences for sharing personal data varying the characteristics of potential recipients. We find that participants’ willingness to share personal data with anonymous recipients decreases with the number of recipients. However, social distance to the recipients and the extent of personal data a single recipient receives do not decrease the willingness to share personal data. Further, we provide a methodological insight by showing that verification of personal data is essential when eliciting privacy preferences.

willingness personal data volkswirtschaft ddc:330 munich discussion papers in economics
Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
China's Role in the History of Globalization

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2015


In my view, globalization is a process that has taken place episodically since approximately the beginning of the 16th century. Previously, there were a number of attemps at globalization, which however failed to attain the precondition of regular commercial and communicative relationships among the parts of the globe; nor did they lead to the kind of stable multilateral interdependence that later took place (Osterhamme/Petersson). In chronologically sequenced chapters, I briefly present the driving forces and the consequences of globalization. In the respective chapters, Chinas highly variegated role is explored: from the first attempt at globalization in the 14/15 centuries, which was of an expansive nature; in the first push at globalization from 1500, China was increasingly in retreat; during the surge of globalization in the 19th century, China was an almost insignificant push‐toy of the European powers; and in the current situation China may be characterized as a tardive beginner, yet then advancing to a leadership role. In concluding I undertake a framework for understanding the so‐called "Chinese Economic Miracle," for which the German term Wirtschaftswunder may readily be substituted. The highly differential significance of China for these various phases of globalization is an arresting example for my hypothesis that globalization may not unreasonably be regarded as a market‐driven and invariably politically‐fashioned process.

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Weak Markets, Strong Teachers: Recession at Career Start and Teacher Effectiveness

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2015


How do alternative job opportunities affect teacher quality? We provide the first causal evidence on this question by exploiting business cycle conditions at career start as a source of exogenous variation in the outside options of potential teachers. Unlike prior research, we directly assess teacher quality with value-added measures of impacts on student test scores, using administrative data on 33,000 teachers in Florida public schools. Consistent with a Roy model of occupational choice, teachers entering the profession during recessions are significantly more effective in raising student test scores. Results are supported by placebo tests and not driven by differential attrition.

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Directed Technical Change and Capital Deepening: A Reconsideration of Kaldor’s Technical Progress Function

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2015


This note proposes a growth model that is derived from the standard Solow growth model by replacing the neoclassical production function with Kaldor’s technical progress function while maintaining a marginalist theory of factor prices in the spirit suggested by von Weizsäcker (1966, 1966b). The hybrid model so obtained accounts for balanced growth in a way that appears less arbitrary than the Solow model, especially because it directly accounts for Harrod neutral technical change, without any need for further assumptions.

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Heterogeneous Preferences and Investments in Energy Saving Measures

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2015


We investigate whether risk, time, environmental, and social preferences affect single family homeowners’ investments in energy efficient renovations and energy quality of their house using established experimental measures and questionnaires. We find that homeowners who report to be more risk taking are more likely to have renovated their house. Pro-environmental and future-oriented renovators, i.e. renovators with lower discount factors, live in homes with higher energy efficiency. Controlling for the energy efficiency of houses, we further find that energy consumption as measured by heating and energy costs are lower for future-oriented and pro-environmental individuals. Social preferences measured in a dictator and a generosity game play a mixed role for investments in energy efficiency and energy consumption.

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Trade, Technologies, and the Evolution of Corporate Governance

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2015


Do international trade and technological change influence how firms create incentives for human capital? I present a model that incorporates agency problems into a framework with firm heterogeneity and human capital. My model indicates that trade liberalizations and skill-biased technological change alter the way how the largest firms in an economy incentivize their managers. Increases in managerial reservation wages lead to a reduction in corporate governance investments and a rise in performance compensation since monitoring managers becomes less efficient. Using data on CEO compensation and entrenchment opportunities in public industrial firms in the U.S., I document strong empirical regularities in support of the model predictions. Firms allow for more managerial entrenchment and offer larger CEO compensation when their industries become more open to trade or when production becomes more I.T. intensive.

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Credit constraints, endogenous innovations, and price setting in international trade

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2015


We introduce credit frictions motivated by moral hazard in a general equilibrium model of international trade with two dimensions of heterogeneity and endogenous investments. Firms’ competitiveness consists of capabilities to conduct process and quality innovations at low costs, whereas investment outlays have to be financed by external capital. We show that the scope for vertical product differentiation in a sector determines how credit tightening affects investment and price setting. Consistent with recent empirical evidence, our model rationalizes positive as well as negative correlations of firm-level FOB prices with financial frictions and variable trade costs. Faced with an increase in the borrowing rate, producers reduce both types of innovation resulting in opposing effects on marginal production costs and prices. In general equilibrium, financial frictions intensify quality-based (cost-based) sorting of firms if the scope for vertical product differentiation is high (low). Consequently, credit tightening leads to firm exit, increased innovation activity among existing suppliers, and welfare losses that are larger in sectors with low investment intensity.

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU
Essays on international trade and firm dynamics

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2015


Wed, 13 May 2015 12:00:00 +0100 https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18265/ https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18265/1/Spiegel_Gilbert.pdf Spiegel, Gilbert ddc:330, ddc:300, Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
muCap: Connecting FaceReader™ to z-Tree

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2015


μCap (muCap) is a software package (citeware) for economic experiments enabling experimenters to analyze emotional states of subjects using z-Tree and FaceReader™. μCap is able to create videos of subjects on client computers based on stimuli shown on screen and restrict recording material to relevant time frames. Another feature of μCap is the creation of time stamps in csv format at prespecified screens (or at prespecified points in time) during the experiment, measured on the client computer. The software makes it possible to import these markers into FaceReader™ easily. Until recently, connecting z-Tree and FaceReader™ was only possible using workarounds or by undertaking many successive actions manually. μCap is the first program that significantly simplifies this process with the additional benefit of extremely high precision. This paper describes the usage, underlying principles as well as advantages and limitations of μCap. Furthermore, we give a brief outlook of how μCap can be beneficial in other contexts.

connecting tree cap volkswirtschaft ddc:330 munich discussion papers in economics
Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU

Wed, 6 May 2015 12:00:00 +0100 https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18226/ https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18226/1/Molato_Rhea.pdf Molato, Rhea ddc:330, ddc:300, Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU

Wed, 6 May 2015 12:00:00 +0100 https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18258/ https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18258/1/Hilmer_Michael.pdf Hilmer, Michael ddc:330, ddc:300, Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Immigration and educational spillovers: evidence from Sudeten German expellees in post-war Bavaria

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2015


This paper analyses long-term effects of forced WWII migration on educational outcomes. Specifically Sudeten German expellees in post-war Bavaria coming from highly industrialized Sudetenland (Czechoslovakia) had strong preferences for higher secondary schooling, especially in form of a practical, business-related, and general education school. As a result they became actively engaged in the development of post-war middle track education (Realschule, Fachschule). Employing county-level data on student numbers and graduates of secondary education, empirical analysis including ordinary least squares, instrumental variable, and differences-in-differences models reveals that counties housing a higher share of Sudeten Germans after the war are significantly associated with higher educational development some 20 years later. An increase in the share of Sudeten Germans by 1 percentage point increases the share of children (graduates) in middle track education by at least 0.8 (0.1) percentage points, respectively. Calculations suggest that these effects are not mechanically caused by Sudeten Germans and their children demanding education, but are the actual result of educational spillovers to the local population.

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU
Cartels, patent pools and the incentive effect of competition

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2015


Wed, 29 Apr 2015 12:00:00 +0100 https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18238/ https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18238/1/Fey_Lisa.pdf Fey, Lisa ddc:330, ddc:300, Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU
International trade and the organization of firms

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2015


Tue, 28 Apr 2015 12:00:00 +0100 https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18351/ https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18351/1/Schymik_Jan.pdf Schymik, Jan Simon ddc:330, ddc:300, Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU
An economic investigation of the use and impact of patents and trade marks in Germany

Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2015


Mon, 27 Apr 2015 12:00:00 +0100 https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18300/ https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/18300/1/Schautschick_Philipp.pdf Schautschick, Philipp ddc:330, ddc:300, Volkswirtschaftl

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
How Does Socio-Economic Status Shape a Child's Personality?

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2015


We show that socio-economic status (SES) is a powerful predictor of many facets of a child's personality. The facets of personality we investigate encompass time preferences, risk preferences, and altruism, as well as crystallized and fluid IQ. We measure a family's SES by the mother's and father's average years of education and household income. Our results show that children from families with higher SES are more patient, tend to be more altruistic and less likely to be risk seeking, and score higher on IQ tests. We also discuss potential pathways through which SES could affect the formation of a child's personality by documenting that many dimensions of a child's environment differ systematically by SES: parenting style, quantity and quality of time parents spend with their children, the mother's IQ and economic preferences, a child's initial conditions at birth, and family structure. Finally, we use panel data to show that the relationship between SES and personality is fairly stable over time at age 7 to 10. Personality profiles that vary systematically with SES might offer an explanation for social immobility.

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

I study the optimal audit mechanism when the principal cannot commit to an audit strategy. Invoking a relevation principle, the agent reports her type to a mediator whi assigns contracts and recommends the principla whether to audit. For each reported type the mediator randomizes over a base-contract and the audit contract, accompanied by a recommendation to audit. For large penalties the optimal mechanism uses strictly more contracts than types and cannot be implemented via offering a menu of contracts. The analysis provides a proper benchmark for studying auditing under limited commitment and sheds new light on the usefulness of mediation in contracting and on the design of optimal mechanisms.

Sozialwissenschaften - Open Access LMU
Complementarities of HRM Practices

Sozialwissenschaften - Open Access LMU

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2015


We provide an overview over different literature streams that aim at explaining the origin of persistent productivity differences across organization by variation in the use of management practices. We focus on human resource management (HRM) practices, document gaps in the literature, and show how insights from behavioral economics can inform the analysis. To this end, we develop a simple agency model illustrating how social preferences influence the design and impact of incentive schemes, investigate how auxiliary HRM practices can strengthen this interaction, and provide an overview over empirical investigations of this questions. Finally, we identify avenues for further research in this field.

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Forward Guidance at the Zero Lower Bound in a Model of Price-Level Targeting

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2015


We study monetary policy at the ZLB in a traceable three-period model, in which price-level targeting emerges endogenously in the welfare function. We characterize optimal price-level forward guidance under discretion and commitment. Potentially non-monotonic discretionary welfare losses are lowest with perfectly flexible prices. Price-level targeting introduces a new constraint on optimal forward guidance that restricts the credible amount of overshooting. With this constraint, the zero lower bound may be binding even after the shock has abated. We characterize conditions when the commitment to hold nominal rates at zero for an extended period is optimal. Finally, we introduce government spending and show that under persistently low policy rates optimal government spending becomes more front-loaded, while procyclical austerity fares worse than discretionary government spending.

price model forward guidance lower bound targeting volkswirtschaft ddc:330 munich discussion papers in economics
Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
How Does Firm Heterogeneity Affect International Tax Policy?

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2015


Thu, 1 Jan 2015 12:00:00 +0100 http://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:ces:ifodic:v:13:y:2015:i:2:p:57-62 https://epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de/27299/1/dice-report-2015-2-haufler-etal-tax-policy-june.pdf Langenmayr, Dominika; Haufler, Andreas ddc:330, Seminar für Wirtschaftspolitik, Lehrstühle, Volkswirtschaft

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Ambiguity aversion is the exception

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2015


An extensive literature has studied ambiguity aversion in economic decision making, and how ambiguity aversion can account for empirically observed violations of expected utility-based theories. Almost all relevant applied models presume a general dislike of ambiguity. In this paper, we provide a systematic experimental assessment of ambiguity attitudes in different likelihood ranges and in the gain domain, the loss Domain and with mixed outcomes. We draw on a unified framework with more than 500 participants and find that ambiguity aversion is the exception, not the rule. We replicate the usual finding of ambiguity aversion for moderate likelihood gains. However, when introducing losses or lower likelihoods, we observe either ambiguity neutrality or even ambiguity seeking behavior. Our results are robust to different elicitation procedures.

domain exception ambiguity aversion volkswirtschaft ddc:330 munich discussion papers in economics
Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Cooperation and Trustworthiness in Repeated Interaction

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2015


Public goods provision often involves groups of contributors repeatedly interacting with administrators who can extract rents from the pool of contributions. We suggest a novel identification approach that exploits the sequential ordering of decisions in a panel vector autoregressive model to study social interactions in the laboratory. Despite rent extraction, contributors and administrators establish a stable interaction with cooperation matching the level from a comparable Public Goods Game. In the short run, temporary changes in behavior trigger substantial behavioral multiplier effects. We demonstrate that cooperation breeds trustworthiness and vice versa and that one-time disruptions are particularly damaging in settings with a lack of cooperative attitudes and trust.

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03
Why Countries Differ in Thin Capitalization Rules: The Role of Financial Development

Volkswirtschaft - Open Access LMU - Teil 03/03

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2015


In the absence of financial frictions, the purpose of thin capitalization rules is to limit multinational firms’ possibilities of engaging in tax planning via debt shifting. This paper analyzes the effects of thin capitalization rules in the case where firms have limited access to external funding. First, we show that a host country allows positive internal interest deductions if its financial development is sufficiently low. This amount increases when the financial development of the host country worsens. Then we ask which of the two most common thin capitalization rules used in practice is better suited to maximizing welfare of the host country. We show that welfare under a safe haven rule is higher than under an earnings stripping rule if firms are not able to manipulate transfer prices. Welfare, however, can be higher under an earnings stripping rule if firms are able to manipulate transfer prices. The analysis provides an explanation for why countries differ in the strictness and in the type of thin capitalization rule.

countries welfare thin differ volkswirtschaft capitalization financial development ddc:330 seminar für wirtschaftspolitik