Publikationen der Abteilung Makroökonomie

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1927 Ergebnisse, ab 111
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Family Ownership: Does It Matter for Funding and Success of Corporate Innovations?

    Using the Mannheim innovation panel, we investigate whether family firms have higher financial need and how this affects both innovation input and innovation outcomes such as firm or market novelties, or process innovation. Applying the CDM framework, we find that family firms are more likely to have a latent financial need for innovation, which means that they have innovation ideas which they have ...

    In: Small Business Economics 48 (2017), 4, S. 931-951 | Dorothea Schäfer, Andreas Stephan, Jennifer Solórzano Mosquera
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Quantifying a Century of State Intervention in Rental Housing in Germany

    The paper aims at measuring the general state intervention in rental housing market in Germany from 1913 through 2015. Four policy classes are considered: Incentives for social housing, tenant protection, housing rationing, and rent controls. Based on a legislation analysis, for each class an index measuring the degree of regulation is constructed. The indices reflect dramatic increases in regulations ...

    In: Urban Research and Practice 10 (2017), 3, S. 267-328 | Konstantin A. Kholodilin
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Risk Forecasting in (T)GARCH Models with Uncorrelated Dependent Innovations

    (G)ARCH-type models are frequently used for the dynamic modelling and forecasting of risk attached to speculative asset returns. While the symmetric and conditionally Gaussian GARCH model has been generalized in a manifold of directions, model innovations are mostly presumed to stem from an underlying IID distribution. For a cross section of 18 stock market indices, we notice that (threshold) (T)GARCH-implied ...

    In: Quantitative Finance 17 (2017), 1, S. 121-137 | Benjamin Beckers, Helmut Herwartz, Moritz Seidel
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Company Rating with Support Vector Machines

    This paper proposes a rating methodology that is based on a non-linear classification method, a support vector machine, and a non-parametric isotonic regression for mapping rating scores into probabilities of default. We also propose a four data set model validation and training procedure that is more appropriate for credit rating data commonly characterised with cyclicality and panel features. Tests ...

    In: Statistics & Risk Modeling 34 (2017), 1-2, S. 55-67 | Rouslan A. Moro, Wolfgang K. Härdle, Dorothea Schäfer
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Capital Taxation and Government Debt Policy with Public Discounting

    This paper characterizes capital taxation and public debt policy in a quantitative macroeconomic model with an impatient government and uncertainty. The government has access to linear taxes on capital and labor, and to non-state-contingent bonds. Government impatience generates positive and empirically realistic long-run levels of both capital taxes and public debt. Prior predictive analysis shows ...

    In: Journal of Economic Dynamics & Control 85 (2017), S. 1-20 | Malte Rieth
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Decoupling Nominal and Real Rigidities: A Reexamination of the Canonical Model of Price Setting under Menu Costs

    We revisit Ball and Romer’s (1990) canonical model of price setting with menu costs that exhibits multiple equilibria. We show that changes to firms’ markups move nominal and real rigidities in opposite directions. Using game-theoretic tools to derive a unique equilibrium, we find that accounting for agents’ endogenous adjustment of price expectations further weakens the link between real and nominal ...

    In: Economics Letters 156 (2017), S. 129-132 | Philipp König, Alexander Meyer-Gohde
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    How Do Insured Deposits Affect Bank Risk? Evidence from the 2008 Emergency Economic Stabilization Act

    This paper tests whether an increase in insured deposits causes banks to become more risky. We use variation introduced by the U.S. Emergency Economic Stabilization Act in October 2008, which increased the deposit insurance coverage from $100,000 to $250,000 per depositor and bank. For some banks, the amount of insured deposits increased significantly; for others, it was a minor change. Our analysis ...

    In: Journal of Financial Intermediation 29 (2017), S. 81-102 | Claudia Lambert, Felix Noth, Ulrich Schüwer
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Euro Area Government Bonds: Fragmentation and Contagion during the Sovereign Debt Crisis

    The paper analyzes the integration of euro area sovereign bond markets during the European sovereign debt crisis. It tests for contagion (i.e., an intensification in the transmission of shocks across countries), fragmentation (a reduction in spillovers) and flight-to-quality patterns, exploiting the heteroskedasticity of intraday changes in bond yields for identification. The paper finds that euro ...

    In: Journal of International Money and Finance 70 (2017), S. 26-44 | Michael Ehrmann, Marcel Fratzscher
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Granularity in Banking and Growth: Does Financial Openness Matter?

    We explore the impact of large banks and of financial openness for aggregate growth. Large banks matter because of granular effects: if markets are very concentrated in terms of the size distribution of banks, idiosyncratic shocks at the bank-level do not cancel out in the aggregate but can affect macroeconomic outcomes. Financial openness may affect GDP growth in and of itself, and it may also influence ...

    In: Journal of Banking & Finance 77 (2017), S. 300-316 | Franziska Bremus, Claudia M. Buch
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Spillovers of U.S. Unconventional Monetary Policy to Emerging Markets: The Role of Capital Flows

    We employ a structural global VAR model to analyze whether U.S. unconventional monetary policy shocks, identified through changes in the central bank’s balance sheet, have an impact on financial and economic conditions in emerging market economies (EMEs). Moreover, we study whether international capital flows are an important channel of shock transmission. We find that an expansionary policy shock ...

    In: Journal of International Money and Finance 73 (2017), Part B., S. 275-295 | Pablo Anaya, Michael Hachula, Christian J. Offermanns
1927 Ergebnisse, ab 111
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