On Growing through Cycles: Matsuyama's M-map and Li-Yorke Chaos
Liuchun Deng, M. Ali Khan
Journal of Mathematical Economics,
January
2018
Abstract
Recent work of Gardini et al. (2008), building on earlier work of Mitra (2001) and Mukherji (2005), considers the so-called M-map that generates a dynamical system underlying Matsuyama’s (1999) endogenous growth model. We offer proofs of the fact that there do not exist 3- or 5-period cycles in the M-map, and an example (a numerical proof) of the existence of a 7-period cycle. We use the latter, and a construction in Khan and Piazza (2011), to identify a range of parameter values of the M-map that guarantee the existence of cycles of all periods, except 3 and 5. Our argumentation relies on, and reports, the first four iterations of the M-map that may have independent interest.
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German Unification: Macroeconomic Consequences for the Country
Axel Lindner
F. Heinemann, U. Klüh, S. Watzka (eds): Monetary Policy, Financial Crises, and the Macroeconomy. Springer,
2017
Abstract
This paper shows basic macroeconomic consequences of the German unification for the country in time series spanning from 20 years before the event until 25 years thereafter. Essential findings can well be explained by elementary economic theory. Moreover, it is shown that the German economy had been off steady state already before unification in important aspects. In particular, a steep increase in the current account balance during the 1980s suggests that globalization strongly affected the German economy at that time. While unification stopped the trend to an ever more open economy and to a rising trade surplus for about 10 years, the fall of the iron curtain eventually even increased this trend in the long run.
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Measuring Indirect Effects of Unfair Employer Behavior on Worker Productivity – A Field Experiment
Matthias Heinz, Sabrina Jeworrek, Vanessa Mertins, Heiner Schumacher, Matthias Sutter
Abstract
We present a field experiment in which we set up a call-center to study how the productivity of workers is affected if managers treat their co-workers in an unfair way. This question cannot be studied in long-lived organizations since workers may change their career expectations (and hence effort) when managers behave unfairly towards co-workers. In order to rule out such confounds and to measure productivity changes of unaffected workers in a clean way, we create an environment where employees work for two shifts. In one treatment, we lay off parts of the workforce before the second shift. Compared to two different control treatments, we find that, in the layoff treatment, the productivity of the remaining, unaffected workers drops by 12 percent. We show that this result is not driven by peer effects or altered beliefs about the job or the managers’ competence, but rather related to the workers’ perception of unfair behavior of employers towards co-workers. The latter interpretation is confirmed in a survey among professional HR managers. We also show that the effect of unfair behavior on the productivity of unaffected workers is close to the upper bound of the direct effects of wage cuts on the productivity of affected workers. This suggests that the price of an employer’s unfair behavior goes well beyond the potential tit-for-tat of directly affected workers.
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Pricing Sin Stocks: Ethical Preference vs. Risk Aversion
Stefano Colonnello, Giuliano Curatola, Alessandro Gioffré
Abstract
We develop a model that reproduces the return and volatility spread between sin and non-sin stocks, where investors trade off dividends with the ethical assessment of companies. We relax the assumption of boycott behaviour and investigate the role played by the dividend share of sin stocks on their return and volatility spread relative to non-sin stocks. We empirically show that the dividend share predicts a positive return and volatility spread. This pattern is reproduced by our model when dividends and ethicalness are complementary goods and investors are sufficiently risk averse.
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06.07.2017 • 28/2017
Politiker sind mitverantwortlich für Ausfallrisiko ihres Staates
Investoren gehen von höheren Ausfallrisiken aus, wenn ein Land politisch instabil ist oder von einer Partei regiert wird, die am linken bzw. rechten Rand des Parteienspektrums angesiedelt ist. Je demokratischer aber der Staat und je stärker er in die Weltwirtschaft eingebunden ist, desto geringer ist auch der Einfluss dieser politischen Faktoren, fand Stefan Eichler vom Leibniz-Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung (IWH) heraus.
Stefan Eichler
Pressemitteilung lesen
15.02.2017 • 11/2017
Presseeinladung: „Von der Transformation zur Europäischen Integration: Wachstumsfaktor Bildung besser nutzen“
Unter dem Titel „Von der Transformation zur Europäischen Integration: Wachstumsfaktor Bildung besser nutzen“ wird das Leibniz-Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung Halle (IWH) am Mittwoch, dem 22. Februar 2017 gemeinsam mit Wissenschaftlerinnen und Wissenschaftlern aus mit dem IWH vernetzten Instituten und Universitäten Forschungsergebnisse zu verschiedenen Aspekten des Wachstumsfaktors Bildung präsentieren.
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05.01.2017 • 3/2017
Sekretariat des Forschungsnetzwerks CompNet künftig am IWH beheimatet
Das Leibniz-Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung Halle (IWH) hat das Sekretariat des Competitiveness Research Network CompNet übernommen, einem internationalen Netzwerk führender Wissenschaftler und Wissenschaftlerinnen sowie Fachleute, die erstklassige Forschung und Politikberatung auf den Gebieten der Wettbewerbsfähigkeit und Produktivität betreiben.
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21.12.2016 • 52/2016
Wirtschaftliche Aussichten Ostdeutschlands für 2017
Im Jahr 2017 wird das Bruttoinlandsprodukt in Ost- wie in Westdeutschland mit 1,3% im Gleichschritt expandieren. Der Wachstumsvorsprung der ostdeutschen Wirtschaft (einschließlich Berlin) in den beiden Vorjahren ist bereits im Jahr 2016 geschmolzen, sodass der wirtschaftliche Aufholprozess Ostdeutschlands insgesamt erneut stagniert.
Udo Ludwig
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Support for Public Research Spin-offs by the Parent Organizations and the Speed of Commercialization
D. Göktepe-Hultén, Viktor Slavtchev
Journal of Technology Transfer,
Nr. 6,
2016
Abstract
We empirically analyze whether support by the parent organization in the early (nascent and seed) stage speeds up the process of commercialization and helps spin-offs from public research organizations generate first revenues sooner. To identify the impact of support by the parent organization, we apply multivariate regression techniques as well as an instrumental variable approach. Our results show that support in the early stage by the parent organization can speed up commercialization. Moreover, we identify two distinct channels—the help in developing a business plan and in acquiring external capital—through which support by the parent organization can enable spin-offs to generate first revenues sooner.
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Taxing Banks: An Evaluation of the German Bank Levy
Claudia M. Buch, Björn Hilberg, Lena Tonzer
Journal of Banking and Finance,
November
2016
Abstract
Bank distress can have severe negative consequences for the stability of the financial system. Regimes for the restructuring and resolution of banks, financed by bank levies, aim at reducing these costs. This paper evaluates the German bank levy, which has been implemented since 2011. Our analysis offers three main insights. First, revenues raised through the levy were lower than expected. Second, the bulk of the payments were contributed by large commercial banks and by the central institutions of savings banks and credit unions. Third, for those banks, which were affected by the levy, we find evidence for a reduction in lending and higher deposit rates.
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