Search Publications

clear
0 filter(s) selected
close
Go to page
remove add
32693 results, from 561
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    The Impact of Economic Uncertainty, Precarious Employment, and Risk Attitudes on the Transition to Parenthood

    This study investigates how precarious employment throughout the life course affects the fertility behavior of men and women in Germany, and how risk attitudes moderate exposure to objectively given uncertainty. Analyzing data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) study from 1990 to 2015, I find that men and women have become quite similar in their fertility behavior: Stable employment accelerates ...

    In: Advances in Life Course Research 47 (2021), 100402, 14 S. | Christian Schmitt
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    The Implication of the Paris Targets for the Middle East through Different Cooperation Options

    The core of the 36th round of the Energy Modeling Forum project shows that it is more likely that major fossil-fuel exporters, such as the Middle East, are highly affected because of the decrease in fossil-fuel extractions required for the worldwide fulfillment of the Paris agreement. We employ a multi-region, multi-sector computable general equilibrium model of global trade and energy to examine the ...

    In: Energy Economics 104 (2021), 105629, 19 S. | Mohammad M. Khabbazan, Christian von Hirschhausen
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Warheads of Energy: Exploring the Linkages between Civilian Nuclear Power and Nuclear Weapons in Seven Countries

    This paper focuses on the causal determinants of the accumulation of nuclear weapons, also known as vertical nuclear proliferation, in China, France, India, Pakistan, Russia, UK, and the US. It empirically analyzes the causal relationships between the civilian uses of nuclear energy, military expenditures, trade openness, and the stockpiling of nuclear warheads. Results from the Toda and Yamamoto (1995) ...

    In: Energy Research & Social Science 81 (2021), 102213, 17 S. | Lars Sorge, Anne Neumann
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Dominant-Currency Pricing and the Global Output Spillovers from US Dollar Appreciation

    We test for the empirical relevance of partial and asymmetric dominant-currency pricing (DCP), the hypothesis that large but not necessarily identical shares of economies’ export and import prices are sticky in US dollar. We first set up a structural three-country New Keynesian dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model which nests DCP, producer-currency pricing and local-currency pricing. Under ...

    In: Journal of International Economics 133 (2021), 103537 | Georgios Georgiadis, Ben Schumann
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    A 2050 Perspective on the Role for Carbon Capture and Storage in the European Power System and Industry Sector

    Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) might be a central technology to reach the decarbonisation goals of the European energy system. However, CCS deployment faces multiple economic, technological, and infrastructure challenges. Related literature tends to only focus on certain aspects of the CCS technology or to be limited to a particular sector perspective. In contrast, this paper presents a holistic ...

    In: Energy Economics 104 (2021), 105631, 18 S. | Franziska Holz, Tim Scherwath, Pedro Crespo del Granado, Christian Skar, Luis Olmos, Quentin Ploussard, Andrés Ramos, Andrea Herbst
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Investing into Third Generation Nuclear Power Plants: Review of Recent Trends and Analysis of Future Investments Using Monte Carlo Simulation

    This paper provides a review of trends in third generation nuclear power plants, and analyzes current and future nuclear power plant investments using Monte Carlo simulations of economic indicators. We first review global trends of nuclear power plant investments, including technical as well as economic trends. The review suggests that cost escalations in the sector observed in previous research continue ...

    In: Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews 143 (2021), 110836, 13 S. | Ben Wealer, Simon Bauer, Christian von Hirschhausen, Claudia Kemfert, Leonard Göke
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Public Good Provision and Local Employment: Evidence from Grammar School Closures in East Germany

    This paper assesses the impact of public good provision on the spatial distribution of employment as predicted by a local labor market model that allows for commuting. Using local grammar school closures in East Germany after 2000 in a difference-in-differences estimation framework coupled with an entropy balancing strategy, we find that the school closures triggered a decline in the number of (employed) ...

    In: Regional Science & Urban Economics 88 (2021), 103672, 18 S. | Ronny Freier, Martin Simmler, Christian Wittrock
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Coupled Lotteries - a New Method to Analyze Inequality Aversion

    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
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    People Underestimate the Errors Made by Algorithms for Credit Scoring and Recidivism Prediction but Accept Even Fewer Errors

    This study provides the first representative analysis of error estimations and willingness to accept errors in a Western country (Germany) with regards to algorithmic decision-making systems (ADM). We examine people’s expectations about the accuracy of algorithms that predict credit default, recidivism of an offender, suitability of a job applicant, and health behavior. Also, we ask whether expectations ...

    In: Scientific Reports 11 (2021), 20171, 11 S. | Felix G. Rebitschek, Gerd Gigerenzer, Gert G. Wagner
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Financial Literacy: Thai Middle-Class Women Do Not Lag Behind

    This research studies the stylized fact of a “gender gap” in that women tend to have lower financial literacy than men. Our data which samples middle-class people from Bangkok does not show a gender gap for those with at least minimum wage earnings. This result is not explained by men’s low financial literacy, nor by women’s high income and good education. Rather, country characteristics may influence ...

    In: Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Finance 31 (2021), 100537, 10 S. | Antonia Grohmann, Olaf Hübler, Roy Kouwenberg, Lukas Menkhoff
32693 results, from 561
keyboard_arrow_up