Stimulierung von Gebühren und Sanktionen der Wassernutzung und Abwasserbeseitigung in Chemiebetrieben
Walter Komar
Externe Publikationen,
1990
Abstract
Read article
Die Aufkommensstruktur von Rohholz und die Standortverteilung der holzverarbeitenden Industrie in der DDR (Teil 1)
Hans-Ulrich Brautzsch
Holz-Zentralblatt 116 / 113 (zusammen mit O.Bloßfeld),
1990
Abstract
Read article
Die Aufkommensstruktur von Rohholz und die Standortverteilung der holzverarbeitenden Industrie in der DDR (Teil 2)
Hans-Ulrich Brautzsch
Holz-Zentralblatt 116 / 114 (zusammen mit O. Bloßfeld),
1990
Abstract
Read article
Review on: Sectoral Economic Structure and the Development of Industrial Employment in the Regions of the Federal Republic of Germany, by J. Müller
Ulrich Blum
Externe Publikationen,
1984
Abstract
Read article
Place-based Industrial Policies and Credit Markets: Evidence from the Former East and West Germany
Aleksandr Kazakov, Michael Koetter
EBRD Transition Report,
2024
Abstract
The Transition Report 2024-25 focuses on industrial policies in the EBRD regions and beyond. Such policies have seen a resurgence, seeking to address market failures such as environmental degradation. However, their track record is mixed. Their growing popularity is shaped primarily by domestic political economy considerations and rising geopolitical tensions. While industrial policies are typically employed by higher-income economies, they are also now used more frequently in economies with less administrative and fiscal capacity to implement them.
Read article
Private Equity in the Hospital Industry
Janet Gao, Yongseok Kim, Merih Sevilir
Journal of Financial Economics,
2099
Abstract
We examine employment and patient outcomes at hospitals acquired by private equity (PE) firms and PE-backed hospitals. While employment declines at PE-acquired hospitals, core medical workers (physicians, nurses, and pharmacists) increase significantly. The proportion of wages paid to core workers increases at PE-acquired hospitals whereas the proportion paid to administrative employees declines. These results are most pronounced for deals where the acquirers are publicly traded PE-backed hospitals. Non-PE-backed acquirers also cut employment but do not increase core workers or reduce administrative expenditures. Finally, PE-backed acquirers are not associated with worse patient satisfaction or mortality rates compared to their non-PE-backed counterparts.
Read article