presse@iwh-halle.de
So viele Firmenpleiten wie seit Jahrzehnten nicht
Steffen Müller
Handelsblatt, 10. April 2024
Podiumsdiskussion in Kooperation mit der Nationalen Akademie der Wissenschaften Leopoldina Die Bevölkerung in Deutschland wird in den kommenden Jahrzehnten aller Voraussicht nach weniger und älter werden. Gleichzeitig nimmt die Zahl derjenigen zu, die als Einwanderer und Einwanderinnen oder Asylsuchende nach Deutschland kommen.
The latest global survey on relative prices and income levels, for the year 2011, showed changes to relative income levels that were larger in lower-income countries, thereby narrowing the world income distribution compared to estimates based on the 2005 survey.
The Halle Forum on Urban Economic Growth - established in 2006 - aims at bringing together original economic and interdisciplinary papers that cast some light on new developments in theoretical and empirical research on economic growth and development in urban environments.
This paper develops a dynamic evaluation approach in discrete time to estimate the impact of training programs for the unemployed on employment transitions.
This paper studies the effects of a series of reforms of the public pension system in Austria in 2000 and 2004.
The Department of Structural Change and Productivity at the Halle Institute for Economic Research (IWH) - Member of the Leibniz Association is hosting a workshop on Entrepreneurship and the Labour Market to be held in Halle (Saale) on April 22-23, 2016.
The Global Financial Stability Report provides an assessment of the global financial system and markets, and addresses emerging market financing in a global context.
We examine the impact of bank-loan supply shocks on firm outcomes and bank risk-taking employing bank-firm matched credit information for the period 2002-2012.
This paper investigates the impact of ample liquidity provision by the European Central Bank on the functioning of the overnight unsecured interbank market from 2008 to 2014.
In countries of the eurozone periphery, payments are typically delayed by several weeks. In a first step, this characteristic is introduced into a new Keynesian small open economy model by the assumption that consumption goods are paid for with a delay of one quarter.