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32760 Ergebnisse, ab 1291
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    The Effects of Family Policy on Maternal Labor Supply: Combining Evidence from a Structural Model and a Quasi-experimental Approach

    Parental leave and subsidized child care are prominent examples of family policies supporting the reconciliation of family life and labor market careers for mothers. In this paper, we combine different empirical strategies to evaluate the employment effects of these policies for mothers with young children. In particular we estimate a structural labor supply model and exploit quasi-experimental variation ...

    In: Labour Economics 36 (2015), S. 84-98 | Johannes Geyer, Peter Haan, Katharina Wrohlich
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    The Distribution of Crowding Costs in Public Transport: New Evidence from Paris

    Whilst congestion in automobile traffic increases trip durations, this is often not the case in rail-based public transport where congestion rather leads to in-vehicle crowding, often neglected in empirical studies. Using original survey data from Paris, this article assesses the distribution of comfort costs of congestion in public transport. Estimating willingness to pay for less crowded trips at ...

    In: Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice 77 (2015), 182-201 | Luke Haywood, Martin Koning
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Financial Conditions, Macroeconomic Factors and Disaggregated Bond Excess Returns

    Bond excess returns can be predicted by macro factors, however, large parts remain still unexplained. We apply a novel term structure model to decompose bond excess returns into expected excess returns (risk premia) and the innovation part. In order to explore these risk premia and innovations, we complement macro variables by financial condition variables as possible determinants of bond excess returns. ...

    In: Journal of Banking & Finance 58 (2015), S. 80-94 | Christoph Fricke, Lukas Menkhoff
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    The Role of Paternal Risk Attitudes in Long-Run Education Outcomes and Intergenerational Mobility

    This paper studies the role of paternal risk attitudes in sons’ long-run education outcomes and in the intergenerational transmission of incomes and education. Based on 1984–2012 German Socio-Economic Panel Study data of sons and fathers, I show that fathers’ risk aversion is inversely related to sons’ long-run levels of education. A quasi-experimental setting provides no evidence for reverse causality. ...

    In: Economics of Education Review 47 (2015), S. 64-79 | Mathias Huebener
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Small Might Be Beautiful, but Bigger Performs Better: Scale Economies in "Green" Refurbishments of Apartment Housing

    The energy efficiency of the residential housing stock plays a key role in strategies to mitigate climate change and global warming. In this context, it is frequently argued that private investment and the quality of thermal upgrades are too low in the light of the challenges faced and the potential energy cost savings. While many authors address the potential barriers for investors to increase energy ...

    In: Energy Economics 50 (2015), S. 240-250 | Claus Michelsen, Sebastian Rosenschon, Christian Schulz
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    The Earnings Return to Graduating with Honors: Evidence from Law Graduates

    This paper aims at studying the causal effects of graduating from a university with an honors degree on subsequent earnings. While a rich body of literature has focused on estimating returns to human capital, few studies have analyzed returns at the very top of the education distribution. We highlight the importance of honors degrees for future labor market success in the context of German law graduates. ...

    In: Labour Economics 34 (2015), S. 39-50 | Ronny Freier, Mathias Schumann, Thomas Siedler
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Race to the Debt Trap? Spatial Econometric Evidence on Debt in German Municipalities

    Through an intertemporal budget constraint, jurisdictions may gain advantages in tax and spending competition by ‘competing’ on debt. While the existing spatial econometric literature focuses on tax and spending competition, very little is known about spatial interaction via public debt. If jurisdictions compete for mobile capital to finance public spending, they may compete in debt levels as well ...

    In: Regional Science & Urban Economics 53 (2015) 20-37 | Rainald Borck, Frank M. Fossen, Ronny Freier, Thorsten Martin
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    The Scapegoat Theory of Exchange Rates: The First Tests

    The scapegoat theory of exchange rates (2 and 5) suggests that market participants may attach excessive weight to individual economic fundamentals, which are picked as “scapegoats” to rationalize observed currency fluctuations at times when exchange rates are driven by unobservable shocks. Using novel survey data that directly measure foreign exchange scapegoats for 12 exchange rates, we find empirical ...

    In: Journal of Monetary Economics 70 (2015), 1-21 | Marcel Fratzscher, Dagfinn Rime, Lucio Sarno, Gabriele Zinna
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Reducing Binge Drinking? The Effect of a Ban on Late-Night-Off-Premise Alcohol Sales on Alcohol-Related Hospital Stays in Germany

    Excessive alcohol consumption among young people is a major public health concern. On March 1, 2010, the German state of Baden-Württemberg banned the sale of alcoholic beverages between 10 pm and 5 am at off-premise outlets (e.g., gas stations, kiosks, supermarkets). We use rich monthly administrative data from a 70% random sample of all hospitalizations during the years 2007–2011 in Germany in order ...

    In: Journal of Public Economics 123 (2015), S. 55-77 | Jan Marcus, Thomas Siedler
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    All Quiet on the Eastern Front? Disruption Scenarios of Russian Natural Gas Supply to Europe

    The 2014 Russian–Ukrainian crisis reignited European concerns about natural gas supply security recalling the experiences of 2006 and 2009. However, the European supply situation, regulation and infrastructure have changed, with better diversified import sources, EU member states being better connected and a common regulation on the security of supply has been introduced. Nevertheless, European dependency ...

    In: Energy Policy 80 (2015), S. 177-189 | Philipp M. Richter, Franziska Holz
32760 Ergebnisse, ab 1291
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