-
DIW Weekly Report 25 / 2021
Since decades, only one fourth of German households invest in shares. One exception was during the three IPOs from 1996 to 2000 of the Deutsche Telekom, which gave Germans a taste to enter the stock market. However, the fall in the share price shortly after the second IPO, followed by corruption scandals of the company, put an end to their enthusiasm. The present study based on SOEP data shows that ...
2021| Chi Hyun Kim, Alexander Kriwoluzky
-
DIW Wochenbericht 3 / 2021
Die Frauenanteile in den Spitzengremien großer Unternehmen in Deutschland sind im vergangenen Jahr weiter gestiegen. In den 200 umsatzstärksten Unternehmen gab es im vierten Quartal des Jahres 2020 mit 101 Vorständinnen sieben mehr als ein Jahr zuvor. Hier wie auch in einigen anderen Unternehmensgruppen gewann die Entwicklung aber kaum an Dynamik. So lag der entsprechende Frauenanteil bei den Top-200-Unternehmen ...
2021| Anja Kirsch, Katharina Wrohlich
-
DIW Wochenbericht 3 / 2021
Der Frauenanteil in Aufsichtsräten großer Unternehmen in Deutschland ist in den vergangenen Jahren gestiegen. Wie dieser zweite Teil des DIW Managerinnen-Barometers 2021 zeigt, wirkt sich das deutlich positiv auf die Interaktion, Diskussion und Entscheidungsfindung in den Kontrollgremien vieler Unternehmen aus. Das geht aus qualitativen Interviews mit 60 AufsichtsrätInnen hervor, die Mandate in insgesamt ...
2021| Anja Kirsch, Katharina Wrohlich
-
DIW Wochenbericht 3 / 2021
2021| Katharina Wrohlich, Erich Wittenberg
-
Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
This paper examines the role of sovereign default beliefs for macroeconomic fluctuations and stabilization policy in a small open economy where fiscal solvency is a critical problem. We set up and estimate a DSGE model on Turkish data and show that accounting for sovereign risk significantly improves the fit of the model through an endogenous amplification between default beliefs, exchange rate and ...
In:
IMF Economic Review
69 (2021), 2, S. 391–426
| Markus Kirchner, Malte Rieth
-
DIW Weekly Report 3/4 / 2021
2021| Anja Kirsch, Katharina Wrohlich
-
DIW Weekly Report 3/4 / 2021
The proportion of women on the boards of large companies in Germany continued to increase during 2020. In the fourth quarter of 2020, there were 101 female executive board members in the 200 largest companies, seven more than in 2019. However, growth was slow, as it was in some of the other groups of companies as well: The proportion of women on the executive boards of the top 200 companies (around ...
2021| Anja Kirsch, Katharina Wrohlich
-
DIW Weekly Report 3/4 / 2021
Over the past years, the proportion of women on the supervisory boards of major companies in Germany has increased. As this second report in the DIW Women Executives Barometer 2021 shows, this has a meaningful, positive impact on the supervisory boards of many companies, and affects interactions between members, discussions, and decision-making. These findings are based on qualitative interviews with ...
2021| Anja Kirsch, Katharina Wrohlich
-
Externe Working Papers
Policy rate cuts in negative territory have increased credit supply and improved the macroeconomic environment similar to cuts in positive territory. Dreaded disruptions to the monetary policy transmission channels as well as adverse side effects on bank profitability have so far largely failed to materialise. Thus, the evidence available today shows that the negative interest rate policy is an effective ...
Bruxelles:
European Parliament,
2021,
37 S.
(Monetary Dialogue Papers ; June 2021)
| Justus Inhoffen, Atanas Pekanov, Thomas Url
-
DIW Discussion Papers 1952 / 2021
Do memories of highly emotional stock market crashes permanently affect the investment decisions of households? The Initial Public Offerings of Deutsche Telekom during 1996- 2000 provide an optimal base to address this question, as it is known for its emotional character and is reputedly “the last time Germans invested in stocks.” Using Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) household survey data, I show that ...
2021| Chi Hyun Kim