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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Given the high number of refugee children and adolescents around the globe, it is critical to determine conditions that foster their adaptation in the receiving country. This study investigated the psychological adaptation of recently arrived adolescent refugees in Germany. We focused on whether psychological adaptation reflects the organizational approach taken by the school that refugee adolescents ...
In:
European Journal of Psychology of Education
37 (2022), 4, S. 1069–1092
| Lisa Pagel, Aileen Edele
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Different local projection (LP) estimators for structural impulse responses of proxy vector autoregressions are reviewed and compared algebraically and with respect to their small sample suitability for inference. Conditions for numerical equivalence and similarities of some estimators are provided. Two generalized least squares (GLS) projection estimators are found to be more accurate than the other ...
In:
Journal of Economic Dynamics & Control
134 (2022), 104277, 17 S.
| Martin Bruns, Helmut Lütkepohl
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Public debates and current research on “digitalization” suggest that digital technologies could profoundly transform the world of work. While broad claims are common in these debates, empirical evidence remains scarce. This calls for reliable data for empirical research and evidence-based policymaking. We implemented a data module in the Socio-Economic Panel to gather information on digitalization ...
In:
Jahrbücher für Nationalökonomie und Statistik
242 (2022), 5-6, S. 691–705
| Alexandra Fedorets, Stefan Kirchner, Jule Adriaans, Oliver Giering
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Weitere referierte Aufsätze
In:
Wirtschaftsdienst
101 (2021), 12, S. 929-932
| Alexandra Fedorets
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
The EU Taxonomy is the first standardised and comprehensive classification system for sustainable economic activities. It covers activities responsible for up to 80% of EU greenhouse gas emissions and may play an important role in channelling investments into low-carbon technologies by helping investors to make informed decisions. However, especially in transition sectors much depends on the stringency ...
In:
Journal of Sustainable Finance & Investment
14 (2024), 1, S. 128–160
| Franziska Schütze, Jan Stede
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
International migration of couples is rising. Still, there is little evidence on men’s and women’s domestic work hours before and after migration. This is despite the fact that domestic work provides deep insights into family life and, for migrants, is directly linked to integration. Therefore, this study examines how immigrant men and women change their domestic work hours following migration, using ...
In:
Journal of Family Issues
44 (2023), 4, S. 954–976
| Magdalena Krieger, Zerrin Salikutluk
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Research has consistently shown that women’s involvement in household decision making positively affects household outcomes such as nutrition and education of children. Is financial literacy a determinant for women to participate in intra-household decision making? Using data on savings groups in Rwanda, we examine this relationship and show that women with higher financial literacy are more involved ...
In:
Journal of African Economies
30 (2021), 3, S. 225–250
| Antonia Grohmann, Annekathrin Schoofs
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Evidence on the effectiveness of foreign exchange (FX) interventions is either limited to short horizons or hampered by debatable identification. We address these limitations by identifying a structural vector autoregressive model for the daily frequency with an external instrument. Generally we find, for freely floating currencies, that FX intervention shocks significantly affect exchange rates and ...
In:
The Review of Economics and Statistics
103 (2021), 5, S. 939–953
| Lukas Menkhoff, Malte Rieth, Tobias Stöhr
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
We extend standard models of work-related training by explicitly incorporating workers’ locus of control into the investment decision through the returns they expect. Our model predicts that higher internal control results in increased take-up of general, but not specific, training. This prediction is empirically validated using data from the German Socioeconomic Panel (SOEP). We provide empirical ...
In:
Journal of Human Resources
57 (2022), 4, S. 1311-1349
| Marco Caliendo, Deborah A. Cobb-Clark, Cosima Obst, Helke Seitz, Arne Uhlendorf
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
During the COVID-19 pandemic, the introduction of mandatory face mask usage triggered a heated debate. A major point of controversy is whether community use of masks creates a false sense of security that would diminish physical distancing, counteracting any potential direct benefit from masking. We conducted a randomized field experiment in Berlin, Germany, to investigate how masks affect distancing ...
In:
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
192 (2021), S. 765-781
| Gyula Seres, Anna Balleyer, Nicola Cerutti, Jana Friedrichsen, Müge Süer
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
This randomized controlled trial examines the effect of a new finance training style during which participants are given personalized feedback on their financial business outcomes in addition to a rule-of-thumb training approach. We compare this with the effects of a rule-of-thumb training by itself and a control group. Targeting about 500 small entrepreneurs in Uganda, we find that the personalized ...
In:
Economic Development and Cultural Change
70 (2022), 3, S. 1197-1227
| Antonia Grohmann, Lukas Menkhoff, Helke Seitz
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
This paper links banking system development to the colonial and legal history of African countries. Based on a sample of 40 African countries from 2000 to 2018, our empirical findings show a significant dependence of current financial institutions on the inherited legal origin and the colonization type. Findings also reveal that current financial legal institutions are not major determinants of banking ...
In:
Journal of Institutional Economics
17 (2021), 4, S. 561–581
| Samuel Mutarindwa, Dorothea Schäfer, Andreas Stephan
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Weitere referierte Aufsätze
Die Weltgesundheitsorganisation (WHO) hat im Frühjahr 2020 Richtlinien für Bevölkerungsstichproben veröffentlicht, die Basisdaten für gesundheitspolitische Entscheidungen im Pandemiefall liefern können. Diese Richtlinien umzusetzen ist keineswegs trivial. In diesem Beitrag schildern wir die Herausforderungen einer entsprechenden statistischen Erfassung der Corona Pandemie. Hierbei gehen wir im ersten ...
In:
AStA Wirtschafts- und Sozialstatistisches Archiv
15 (2021), S. 155–196
| Ulrich Rendtel, Stefan Liebig, Reinhard Meister, Gert G.Wagner, Sabine Zinn
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Families’ economic wealth is a resource that can provide children with crucial advantages early in their lives. Prior research identified substantial variation of wealth levels between different family types with children from single-parent families being most disadvantaged. The causes of this disadvantage, how much the disadvantage varies between children and how the non-resident parents’ wealth may ...
In:
Journal of European Social Policy
31 (2021), 5, S. 565–579
| Philipp M. Lersch, Markus M. Grabka, Kilian Rüß, Carsten Schröder
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
We study the state-dependent trading behavior of financial institutions in the oil futures market, using structural vector autoregressions with Markov switching in heteroskedasticity. We consider two states of the world: tranquil and turbulent. We decompose the observable time-varying price volatility during the period 2006M6–2016M5 into changes in the slopes of traders’ demand curves and into changes ...
In:
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
191 (2021), S. 1011-1024
| Daniel Bierbaumer, Malte Rieth, Anton Velinov
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
We present evidence from a repeated survey on risky asset holdings carried out on a representative sample of the German population six times between April and June 2020. Given the size of the Covid-19 shock, we find little evidence of portfolio rebalancing in April 2020. In May, however, individual investors started buying heavily, parallel to market recovery. The cross-section shows large differences ...
In:
The Review of Income and Wealth
68 (2022), 2, . 497-517
| Lukas Menkhoff, Carsten Schröder
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Several vaccines against COVID-19 have now been developed and are already being rolled out around the world. The decision whether or not to get vaccinated has so far been left to the individual citizens. However, there are good reasons, both in theory as well as in practice, to believe that the willingness to get vaccinated might not be sufficiently high to achieve herd immunity. A policy of mandatory ...
In:
PloS one
16 (2021), 5, e0248372, 18 S.
| Daniel Graeber, Christoph Schmidt-Petri, Carsten Schröder
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
We develop and implement a new measure for inequality aversion: two peers are endowed with identical binary lotteries and the only choice they make is whether they want to play out the lotteries independently or with perfect positive correlation (coupling). Coupling has the core reason to prevent outcome inequality. We implement the method in a survey in rural Thailand as well as in a supplemental ...
In:
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
191 (2021), S. 236–256
| Melanie Koch, Lukas Menkhoff, Ulrich Schmidt
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Mobile money is an important instrument to improve the degree of financial inclusion, especially in developing countries. However, having a mobile money account does not imply that this account is actually used. In our sample, 86% of microentrepreneurs own a mobile money account, but only 49% actively use it – the resulting gap indicates unmet opportunities. We estimate that mobile money reaches up ...
In:
Journal of Development Studies
58 (2022), 4, S. 671-691
| Jana S. Hamdan, Katharina Lehmann-Uschner, Lukas Menkhoff
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Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
In current immigration debates ethnic prejudice is often expressed in a subtle manner, which conceals its xenophobic content. However, previous research has only insufficiently examined the specific features that make certain ethnically prejudicial statements subtler, i.e., less readily identifiable as xenophobic, than others. The current study employs an experimental factorial survey design and assesses ...
In:
Journal of Social and Political Psychology
9 (2021), 1, S. 187–206
| Karolina Fetz, Martin Kroh