Diskussionspapiere

close
Gehe zur Seite
remove add
2162 Ergebnisse, ab 541
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1619 / 2016

    Erbschaftsteuer, Vermögensteuer oder Kapitaleinkommensteuer: Wie sollen hohe Vermögen stärker besteuert werden?

    Wenn hohe Vermögen stärker besteuert werden sollen, spricht vieles für eine effektivere Erbschaftsteuer. Dazu sollten die weitgehenden Steuerbefreiungen für Unternehmensübertragungen und weitere Steuervergünstigungen beseitigt werden. Dadurch ließe sich auch bei moderaten Steuersätzen für Unternehmensübertragungen das Steueraufkommen längerfristig mehr als verdoppeln. Ferner könnten die Vermögensteuer ...

    2016| Stefan Bach
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1618 / 2016

    Entrepreneurial Spillovers over Space and Time

    Entrepreneurship is a local and dynamic phenomenon. We jointly investigate spatial spillovers and time persistence of regional new business formation. Using panel data from all 402 German counties for 1996-2011, we estimate dynamic spatial panel models of business creation in the high-tech and manufacturing industries. We consider regions of different sizes and systematically search for the most suitable ...

    2016| Frank M. Fossen, Thorsten Martin
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1617 / 2016

    Pension Incentives and Early Retirement

    In this paper we exploit a cohort-specific pension reform to estimate the causal labour market effects of changes in the financial incentives to retire. In particular, we analyze the effects of the introduction of cohort-specific deductions for early retirement on female retirement, employment and unemployment. For the empirical analysis we use high-quality administrative data from the German pension ...

    2016| Barbara Engels, Johannes Geyer, Peter Haan
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1616 / 2016

    The Impact of Lengthening the School Day on Substance Abuse and Crime: Evidence from a German High School Reform

    In the 2000s, a major educational reform in Germany reduced the academic high school duration by one year while keeping constant the total number of instructional hours before graduation. The instructional hours from the eliminated school year shifted to lower grade levels, which increased the time younger students spend at school. This study explores the impact of the reform on youth crime rates and ...

    2016| Franz Westermaier
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1615 / 2016

    Financial Literacy: Thai Middle Class Women Do Not Lag behind

    This research studies the stylized fact of a “gender gap” in that women tend to have lower financial literacy than men. Our data which samples middle-class people from Bangkok does not show a gender gap. This result is not explained by men’s low financial literacy, nor by women’s high income and good education. Rather, it seems influenced by country characteristics on general gender equality and finance-related ...

    2016| Antonia Grohmann, Olaf Hübler, Roy Kouwenberg, Lukas Menkhoff
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1614 / 2016

    Market Power and Heterogeneous Pass-through in German Electricity Retail

    We analyze the pass-through of cost changes to retail tariffs in the German electricity market over the 2007 to 2014 period. We find an average pass-through rate of around 60%, which significantly varies with demand factors: while the pass-through rate to baseline tariffs, where firms have higher market power, is only 50%, it increases to 70% in the competitive segment of the market. Although the pass-through ...

    2016| Tomaso Duso, Florian Szücs
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1613 / 2016

    The Effect of Increasing Education Efficiency on University Enrollment: Evidence from Administrative Data and an Unusual Schooling Reform in Germany

    We examine the consequences of compressing secondary schooling on students’ university enrollment. An unusual education reform in Germany reduced the length of academic high school while simultaneously increasing the instruction hours in the remaining years. Accordingly, students receive the same amount of schooling but over a shorter period of time, constituting an efficiency gain from an individual’s ...

    2016| Jan Marcus, Vaishali Zambre
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1612 / 2016

    Restrictions Search for Panel VARs

    As panel vector autoregressive (PVAR) models can include several countries and variables in one system, they are well suited for global spillover analyses. However, PVARs require restrictions to ensure the feasibility of the estimation. The present paper uses a selection prior for a data-based restriction search. It introduces the stochastic search variable selection for PVAR models (SSVSP) as an alternative ...

    2016| Annika Schnücker
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1611 / 2016

    Austerity and Private Debt

    This study provides empirical evidence that the costs of austerity crucially depend on the level of private indebtedness. In particular, fiscal consolidations lead to severe contractions when implemented in high private debt states. Contrary, fiscal consolidations have no significant effect on economic activity when private debt is low. These results are robust to alternative definitions of private ...

    2016| Mathias Klein
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1610 / 2016

    Coping with Consequences of a Housing Crisis during Great War: A Case of Right-Bank Ukraine in 1914-1918

    World War I led to radical changes in the government policy of participating countries. The enormous demographic and economic disturbances caused by the war forced the governments of all the belligerent nations to drastically restrict the market freedom. In particular, the state began actively intervening in the housing market. Ukraine as a part of the former Russian Empire, for the first time in its ...

    2016| Konstantin A. Kholodilin, Tymofiy Gerasymov
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1609 / 2016

    Distributional Effects of Taxing Financial Transactions and the Low Interest Rate Environment

    The study aims to assess the distributional effects of taxing financial transactions including a focus on gender. It specifically investigates the impact of the low interest rate environment on tax revenues and distribution. The first part of the study is explorative, aiming to develop a concept for the assessment. This is because the role of low or even negative interest rates is not yet specifically ...

    2016| Dorothea Schäfer
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1608 / 2016

    Estimating Risky Behavior with Multiple-Item Risk Measures

    We compare seven established risk elicitation methods and investigate how they robustly explain eleven kinds of risky behavior with 760 individuals. Risk measures are positively correlated; however, their performance in explaining behavior is heterogeneous and, therefore, difficult to assess ex ante. To close this knowledge gap, greater diversification across risk measures is helpful. We do, indeed, ...

    2016| Lukas Menkhoff, Sahra Sakha
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1607 / 2016

    Political Corruption in the Execution of Public Contracts

    This paper presents a novel theory of corruption in public procurement. It considers an agency setting of contract execution where the principal is a politician who can commit to a contract auditing policy. It is found that a benevolent politician, by choosing a sufficiently strict auditing, deters the contracting firm from padding costs, conversely, a selfish politician chooses a relatively lax auditing ...

    2016| Olga Chiappinelli
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1606 / 2016

    Re-vitalizing Money Demand in the Euro Area: Still Valid at the Zero Lower Bound

    The analysis of monetary developments have always been a cornerstone of the ECB’s monetaryanalysis and, thus, of its overall monetary policy strategy. In this respect, money demandmodels provide a framework for explaining monetary developments and assessing price stabilityover the medium term. It is a well-documented fact in the literature that, when interestrates are at the zero lower bound, the analysis ...

    2016| Christian Dreger, Dieter Gerdesmeier, Barbara Roffia
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1605 / 2016

    Monetary Policy and Mispricing in Stock Markets

    This paper investigates whether central banks can attenuate excessive mispricing in stocks as suggested by the proponents of a "leaning against the wind" (LATW) monetary policy. For this, we decompose stock prices into a fundamental component, a risk premium, and a mispricing component. We argue that mispricing can arise for two reasons: (i) from false subjective expectations of investors about future ...

    2016| Benjamin Beckers, Kerstin Bernoth
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1604 / 2016

    Testing Supply-Side Climate Policies for the Global Steam Coal Market - Can They Curb Coal Consumption?

    The achieved international consensus on the 1.5‐2°C target entails that most of current fossil fuel reserves must remain unburned. Currently, a majority of climate policies aiming at this goal are directed towards the demand side. In the absence of a global carbon regime these polices are prone to carbon leakage and other adverse effects. Supply‐side climate policies present an alternative and more ...

    2016| Roman Mendelevitch
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1603 / 2016

    The Family Working Time Model - Toward More Gender Equality in Work and Care

    Since the millennium, the labor market participation of women and mothers is increasing across European countries. Several work/care policy measures underlie this evolution. At the same time, the labor market behavior of men and fathers, as well as their involvement in care work, is relatively unchanging, meaning that employed mothers are facing an increased burden with respect to gainful employment ...

    2016| Kai-Uwe Müller, Michael Neumann, Katharina Wrohlich
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1602 / 2016

    Ambiguity and Time-Varying Risk Aversion in Sovereign Debt Markets

    This paper introduces changes in the level of ambiguity as a complementary source of time-varying risk aversion. We show in a consumption-based asset pricing model with simultaneously risky and ambiguous assets that a rise in the level of ambiguity raises investors' risk aversion. The effect is quantified in an application to European sovereign debt markets using a structural VAR to achieve identification ...

    2016| Christoph Große Steffen, Maximilian Podstawski
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1601 / 2016

    The Valley of Death, the Technology Pork Barrel, and Public Support for Large Demonstration Projects

    Moving non-incremental innovations from the pilot scale to full commercial scale raises questions about the need and implementation of public support. Heuristics from the literature put policy makers in a dilemma between addressing a market failure and acknowledging a government failure: incentives for private investments in large scale demonstrations are weak (the valley of death) but the track record ...

    2016| Gregory F. Nemet, Martina Kraus, Vera Zipperer
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1600 / 2016

    Peer Effects in Parental Leave Decisions

    This paper analyzes to what extent parental leave decisions of mothers with young children depend on the decisions made by their coworkers. The identification of peer effects, which are defined as indirect effects of the behavior of a social reference group on individual outcomes, bears various challenges due to correlated characteristics within social groups and endogenous group membership. We overcome ...

    2016| Clara Welteke, Katharina Wrohlich
2162 Ergebnisse, ab 541
keyboard_arrow_up