Forced Migration, Staying Minorities, and New Societies: Evidence from Postwar Czechoslovakia
Jakub Grossmann, Štěpán Jurajda, Felix Rösel
American Journal of Political Science,
Nr. 2,
2023
Abstract
Can staying minorities who evade ethnic cleansing affect political outcomes in resettled communities? After World War Two, three million ethnic Germans were expelled from Czechoslovakia's Sudetenland, but some were allowed to stay, many of them left-leaning antifascists. We study quasi-experimental local variation in expulsion policies, a result of the surprising presence of the U.S. Army, which indirectly helped antifascist Germans stay. We find a long-lasting footprint: Communist party support, party cells, and far-left values are stronger today where antifascist Germans stayed in larger numbers. Postwar German Communist elites appear to be behind this effect along with the intergenerational transmission of values among active party members.
Artikel Lesen
Who Benefits from Place-based Policies? Evidence from Matched Employer-Employee Data
Philipp Grunau, Florian Hoffmann, Thomas Lemieux, Mirko Titze
IWH Discussion Papers,
Nr. 11,
2024
Abstract
We study the wage and employment effects of a German place-based policy using a research design that exploits conditionally exogenous EU-wide rules governing the program parameters at the regional level. The place-based program subsidizes investments to create jobs with a subsidy rate that varies across labor market regions. The analysis uses matched data on the universe of establishments and their employees, establishment-level panel data on program participation, and regional scores that generate spatial discontinuities in program eligibility and generosity. These rich data enable us to study the incidence of the place-based program on different groups of individuals. We find that the program helps establishments create jobs that disproportionately benefit younger and less-educated workers. Funded establishments increase their wages but, unlike employment, wage gains do not persist in the long run. Employment effects estimated at the local area level are slightly larger than establishment-level estimates, suggesting limited spillover effects. Using subsidy rates as an instrumental variable for actual subsidies indicates that it costs approximately EUR 25,000 to create a new job in the economically disadvantaged areas targeted by the program.
Artikel Lesen
Europas populistische Parteien im Aufwind
Europas populistische Parteien im Aufwind: die dunkle Seite von Globalisierung und technologischem Wandel? ...
Zur Seite
Startseite
Chinesische Massenimporte stärken extreme Parteien Die Globalisierung hat den politischen Rändern in Europa...
Zur Seite
Department Profiles
Research Profiles of the IWH Departments All doctoral students are allocated to one...
Zur Seite
People
People Job Market Candidates Doctoral...
Zur Seite
People
People Job Market Candidates Doctoral...
Zur Seite
Department Profiles
Research Profiles of the IWH Departments All doctoral students are allocated to one...
Zur Seite
IWH European Real Estate Index
IWH European Real Estate Index Die IWH European Real Estate Database ist ein neuer...
Zur Seite