-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
We investigate whether people are more willing to become self-employed during boom periods or during recessions and to what extent business cycles and unemployment levels influence entries into entrepreneurship. Our analysis for Germany reveals that there is a positive relationship between unemployment rates and start-up activities. Moreover, new business formation is higher during recessions than ...
In:
International Entrepreneurship and Management Journal
11 (2015), 2, S. 267-286
| Michael Fritsch, Alexander S. Kritikos, Katharina Pijnenburg
-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
We apply recently proposed individual welfare measures in the context of preference heterogeneity, derived from structural labour supply models. Contrary to the standard practice of using reference preferences and wages, these measures preserve preference heterogeneity in the normative step of the analysis. They also make the ethical priors, implicit in any interpersonal comparison, more explicit. ...
In:
International Tax and Public Finance
22 (2015), Iss. 2, S. 224-251
| André Decoster, Peter Haan
-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
In:
Entrepreneurship & Regional Development
27 (2015), 5-6, S. 307-333
| Alexander S. Kritikos, Michael Fritsch, Alina Sorgner
-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
What happens in the occupational careers of men if the intergenerational continuity in status reproduction is disrupted by the failure to reproduce the parental level of educational attainment? We frame this failure as a risk for intergenerational status maintenance and ask whether such a risk induces extra effort by way of compensation. By studying eight birth cohorts born between 1919 and 1971 characterized ...
In:
European Sociological Review
31(2015), 2, S. 172-183
| Martin Diewald, Wiebke Schulz, Tina Baier
-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Signature requirements are often used as hurdles to prevent overuse of direct democratic instruments such as citizen initiatives. We evaluate the causal effect of lowering signature requirements on the number of observed citizen initiative petitions. Based on municipal-level data for Germany, we make use of changes in signature requirements that occur at specific population thresholds to build an identification ...
In:
Public Choice
162 (2015), 1-2, S. 43-56
| Felix Arnold, Ronny Freier
-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
To better understand age differences in negative affective responses to daily hassles, the current study investigated how responses may depend on how much time has elapsed after the hassle and how much one still thinks about the hassle. In an experience-sampling approach with mobile phones, 397 participants aged 12 to 88 years reported their momentary activating (e.g., angry) and deactivating (e.g., ...
In:
Emotion
15 (2015), 2, S. 257-269
| Cornelia Wrzus, Gloria Luong, Gert G. Wagner, Michaela Riediger
-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
The transformation of the European electricity system requires substantial investment in transmission capacity to facilitate cross-border trade and to efficiently integrate renewable energy sources. However, network planning in the EU is still mainly a national prerogative. In contrast to other studies aiming to identify the pan-European (continental) welfare-optimal transmission expansion, we investigate ...
In:
European Journal of Operational Research
247 (2015), 1, S. 191-203
| Daniel Huppmann, Jonas Egerer
-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
One of the central debates surrounding the design of the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme is the approach to address carbon leakage concerns. Correctly identifying the economic activities exposed to the risk of carbon leakage represents the first step in mitigating the risk effectively. This paper assesses the robustness of the quantitative assessment criteria used by the European Commission ...
In:
Environmental & Resource Economics
60 (2015), 1, S. 99-124
| Misato Sato, Karsten Neuhoff, Verena Graichen, Katja Schumacher, Felix Matthes
-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
We employ German social security records to investigate intragenerational lifetime earnings inequality and mobility of yearly earnings for 35 cohorts, starting with the birth year 1935. Our main result is a striking secular rise of intragenerational inequality in lifetime earnings: West German men born in the early 1960s are likely to experience about 85% more lifetime inequality than their fathers. ...
In:
Journal of Labor Economics
33 (2015) No. 1, S. 171-208
| Timm Bönke, Giacomo Corneo, Holger Lüthen
-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
This study analyses differences in individual-level working poverty determinants between Germany and the UK. These differences are linked to institutional patterns at the country level. Here, we observe that the two countries differ especially in bargaining centralisation, employment protection legislation and family policy. At the same time, the levels of decommodification and labour market regulation ...
In:
European Societies
17 (2015), No. 1, S. 27-46
| Marco Giesselmann