Publikationen der Abteilung Makroökonomie

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1932 Ergebnisse, ab 1001
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1934 / 2021

    Two Dimensions of Political Trust in Russia

    This paper analyzes two dimensions of factors of political trust in Russia. The first dimension is the target dimension (sociotropic vs. egocentric), the second dimension is the time dimension (retrospective vs. perspective). The study is based on the microdata of 2016 Life in Transition Survey (LiTS) of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. We find a robust evidence in favor of the ...

    2021| Konstantin A. Kholodilin, Vyacheslav N. Ovchinnikov, Marina Yu. Malkina, Igor A. Moiseev
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1933 / 2021

    Measuring Unmeasurable: How to Map Laws to Numbers Using Leximetrics

    As the institutional literature convincingly shows, socioeconomic phenomena are to a large extent shaped by the formal institutions, that is, legal acts (laws and ordinances). However, the latter are formulated in a specific language that is difficult to understand, let alone to measure. However, since the early 1990s, a whole branch of economic analysis of governmental regulations has evolved. It is ...

    2021| Konstantin A. Kholodilin, Linus Pfeiffer
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1928 / 2021

    Forward to the Past: Short-Term Effects of the Rent Freeze in Berlin

    In 2020, Berlin enacted a rigorous rent-control policy: the “Mietendeckel” (rent freeze), aiming to stop rapidly growing rental prices. We evaluate this newly enacted but old-fashionably designed policy by analyzing its immediate supply-side effects. Using a rich pool of rent advertisements reporting asking rents and comprehensive dwelling characteristics, we perform hedonic-style Difference-in-Difference ...

    2021| Anja M. Hahn, Konstantin A. Kholodilin, Sofie R. Waltl
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1927 / 2021

    Rent Price Control – Yet Another Great Equalizer of Economic Inequalities? Evidence from a Century of Historical Data

    The long-run U-shaped patterns of economic inequality are standardly explained by basic economic trends (Piketty’s r>g), taxation policies, or “great levelers,” like catastrophes. This paper argues that housing policy, in particular rent control, is a neglected explanatory factor in understanding overall inequality. We hypothesize that rent control could decrease overall housing wealth, lower incomes ...

    2021| Konstantin A. Kholodilin, Sebastian Kohl
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1908 / 2020

    Firm Financing and the Relative Demand for Labor and Capital

    During both the 2008 and the COVID crises, aggregate employment in Europe and the US fell despite continuing growth in the aggregate capital stock. Using more than one million firm-year observations of small and medium European firms between 2003 and 2018, this paper introduces new stylized facts on how firms’ relative demand for labor and capital evolved as their capital structure adjusted to the ...

    2020| Khalid ElFayoumi
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1907 / 2020

    Better off without the Euro? A Structural VAR Assessment of European Monetary Policy

    Modern OCA theory has developed different conclusions on when forming a currency union is beneficial. An important pragmatic question in this context is: Did delegating monetary policy to the ECB increase stress in the individual euro area countries? An SVAR analysis reveals that monetary stress has declined more in the euro area than in the euro areas’ doppelganger. The synthetic doppelganger is composed ...

    2020| Jan Philipp Fritsche, Patrick Christian Harms
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1906 / 2020

    Exchange Rates and the Information Channel of Monetary Policy

    We disentangle the effects of monetary policy announcements on real economic variables into an interest rate shock component and a central bank information shock component. We identify both components using changes in interest rate futures and in exchange rates around monetary policy announcements. While the volatility of interest rate surprises declines around the Great Recession, the volatility of ...

    2020| Oliver Holtemöller, Alexander Kriwoluzky, Boreum Kwak
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1901 / 2020

    Government Spending Multipliers in (Un)certain Times

    We estimate the dynamic effects of government spending shocks, using time-varying volatility in US data modeled through a Markov switching process. We find that the average government spending multiplier is significantly and persistently above one, driven by a crowding-in of private consumption and non-residential investment. We rationalize the results empirically through a contemporaneously countercyclical ...

    2020| Jan Philipp Fritsche, Mathias Klein, Malte Rieth
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1899 / 2020

    Crisis Impact on the Diversity of Financial Portfolios: Evidence from European Citizens

    Since the 2008 Lehman bankruptcy, it is clearly shown that global economic and financial crises present major challenges to private households, requiring from them, a high level of shock absorption capacity. According to the old adage, “Do not put all the eggs in one basket”, resilience depends, to a large extent on financial diversification. So far, especially for Europe, little is known about whether ...

    2020| Dorothea Schäfer, Michael Stöckel, Henriette Weser
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1873 / 2020

    The Macroeconomic Effects of a European Deposit (Re-) Insurance Scheme

    Recent proposals for a still missing European deposit insurance scheme (EDIS) argue in favor of a reinsurance framework. In this paper, we use a regime-switching open-economy DSGE model with bank default to assess the relative efficiency of such a scheme. We find that reinsurance by EDIS is more effective in stabilizing real activity, credit, and welfare than a national fiscal backstop. We demonstrate ...

    2020| Marius Clemens, Stefan Gebauer, Tobias König
1932 Ergebnisse, ab 1001
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