Publikationen der Abteilung Staat

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1866 Ergebnisse, ab 921
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1592 / 2016

    Veränderungen der Erwerbsanreize durch das Elterngeld Plus für Mütter und Väter

    Unser Beitrag nimmt die zu erwartenden Effekte des Elterngeld Plus und der Partnerschaftsbonusmonate in den Blick. Dem Reformziel entsprechend betrachten wir zum einen die Anreize für die Erwerbsbeteiligung von Müttern im ersten und zweiten Jahr nach der Geburt und zum anderen die möglichen Wirkungen auf die Beteiligung der Väter an der Elterngeldnutzung. Das Elterngeld wurde inzwischen acht Jahre ...

    2016| Johannes Geyer, Alexandra Krause
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1586 / 2016

    Locus of Control and Mothers' Return to Employment

    This paper investigates the effect of locus of control (LOC) on the length of mothers’ employment break after childbirth. Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP), duration data reveals that women with an internal LOC return to employment more quickly than women with an external LOC. We find evidence that this effect is mainly related to differential appreciation of the career costs ...

    2016| Eva M. Berger, Luke Haywood
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1578 / 2016

    The Economic Incidence of Social Security Contributions: A Discontinuity Approach with Linked Employer-Employee Data

    We estimate economic incidence of social security contributions (SSC) on the basis of cross-sectional earnings distributions. The approach exploits discontinuities in earnings distributions at kinks in the budget set which are informative about tax incidence. Contrary to most research on SSC incidence, it does not rely on policy reforms, panel data, or hours information. When the location of kinks ...

    2016| Kai-Uwe Müller, Michael Neumann
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1568 / 2016

    Wind Electricity Subsidies = Windfall Gains for Land Owners? Evidence from Feed-In Tariff in Germany

    In 2013, around 121 billion US-Dollar were spend worldwide to promote the investment into renewable energy sources. The most prominent support scheme employed is a feed-in tariff, which guarantees a fixed price for electricity produced by renewable energies sources, usually for around 15 years after the installation of the plant. We study the incidence of wind turbine subsidies, due to a feed-in tariff ...

    2016| Peter Haan, Martin Simmler
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1560 / 2016

    How Does Maternal Pension Wealth Affect Family Old-Age Savings in Germany?

    This paper examines how families adjust their private old-age savings in response to a change in individual pension wealth. The regression discontinuity approach exploits two expansions of the child care pension benefit, in 1992 and in 1999, as natural experiments. The empirical analysis is based on three waves of the Survey of Income and Expenditure (EVS): 1998, 2003 and 2008. All results indicate ...

    2016| Andreas Thiemann
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1535 / 2015

    Crowding in Public Transport: Who Cares and Why?

    Crowding on public transport (PT) is a major issue for commuters around the world. Nevertheless, economists have rarely investigated the causes of crowding discomfort. Furthermore, most evidence on the costs of PT crowding is based on contingent valuation studies. First, this paper assesses discomfort with PT crowding over different density levels, trip durations and across different individuals using ...

    2015| Luke Haywood, Martin Koning, Guillaume Monchambert
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1520 / 2015

    Indirect Fiscal Effects of Long-Term Care Insurance

    Informal care by close family members is the main pillar of most longterm care systems. However, due to demographic ageing the need for long-term care is expected to increase while the informal care potential is expected to decline. From a budgetary perspective, informal care is often viewed as a cost-saving alternative to subsidized formal care. This view, however neglects that many family carers ...

    2015| Johannes Geyer, Peter Haan, Thorben Korfhage
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1514 / 2015

    The Dynamics of Earnings in Germany: Evidence from Social Security Records

    This paper uncovers ongoing trends in idiosyncratic earnings volatility across generations by decomposing residual earnings auto-covariances into a permanent and a transitory component. We employ data on complete earnings life cycles forprime age men born 1935 through 1974 that covers earnings between 1960 and 2009. Over this period, the German labor market undergoes a heavy transformation and experiences ...

    2015| Timm Bönke, Matthias Giesecke, Holger Lüthen
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1510 / 2015

    From Financial to Real Economic Crisis: Evidence from Individual Firm-Bank Relationships in Germany

    What began as a financial crisis in the United States in 2007–2008 quickly evolved into a massive crisis of the global real economy. We investigate the importance of the bank lending and firm borrowing channel in the international transmission of bank distress to the real economy—in particular, to real investment and labor employment by nonfinancial firms. We analyze whether and to what extent firms ...

    2015| Nadja Dwenger, Frank M. Fossen, Martin Simmler
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1503 / 2015

    Regression Discontinuity Designs Based on Population Thresholds: Pitfalls and Solutions

    In many countries, important features of municipal government (such as the electoral system, mayors' salaries, and the number of councillors) depend on whether the municipality is above or below arbitrary population thresholds. Several papers have used a regression discontinuity design (RDD) to measure the effects of these threshold-based policies on political and economic outcomes. Using evidence ...

    2015| Andrew C. Eggers, Ronny Freier, Veronica Grembi, Tommaso Nannicini
1866 Ergebnisse, ab 921
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