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Paris:
OECD,
2005,
(OECD Social, Employment and Migration Working Papers No. 22)
| Michael F. Förster, Marco Mira d'Ercole
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In:
Peter Krause, Gerhard Bäcker, Walter Hanesch ,
Combating Poverty in Europe: The German Welfare Regime in Practice
Aldershot: Ashgate
169-198
| Michael F. Förster, Mark Pearson
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This paper addresses the question of the institutional flexibility of three major European welfare states. Using Data from the second and fifth wave of the Luxembourg Income Study (LIS), we measure first how effectively the German, British and Italian welfare state have responded to changes in their country-specific poverty risks profile. Further, we apply a macro-simulation to evaluate the performance ...
Luxembourg:
Luxembourg Income Study (LIS),
2008,
(Luxembourg Income Study Working Paper No. 501)
| Matteo Foschi, Martin Schommer
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We investigate how personal income taxes affect the portfolio share of personal wealth that entrepreneurs invest in their own business. In a portfolio choice model that allows for tax sheltering, we show that lower tax rates may increase investment in entrepreneurial equity at the intensive margin, but decrease it at the extensive margin. Using German panel data, we identify tax effects on the portfolio ...
In:
International Tax and Public Finance
27 (2020), 6, 1321-1363
| Frank M. Fossen, Ray Rees, Davud Rostam-Afschar, Viktor Steiner
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Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2007,
(SOEPpapers 29)
| Frank M. Fossen
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When potential income tax reforms are debated, the suspected impact on entrepreneurship is often used as an argument in favour of or against a certain policy. Quantitative ex-ante evaluations of the effect of certain tax reform options on entrepreneurship are very rare, however. This paper estimates the ex-ante effects of the German tax reform 2000 and of two hypothetical flat-rate tax scenarios on ...
In:
Fiscal Studies
30 (2009), 2, 179-218
| Frank M. Fossen
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The empirical finding that entrepreneurs invest a large share of their wealth in their own firms, despite comparably low returns and high risk, has become known as the private equity premium puzzle. This paper provides evidence supporting the hypothesis that lower risk-aversion of entrepreneurs, and thus not necessarily credit constraints, may explain this puzzle. The analysis is based on a representative ...
In:
Economica
78 (2011), 312, 656-675
| Frank M. Fossen
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Why are female entrepreneurs so rare? In Germany, women exhibit both a lower entry rate into and higher exit rate from self-employment. To explain this gender gap, this study estimates a structural microeconometric model of transition rates that includes a standard risk aversion parameter. Inputs into the model are the expected value and variance of earnings from self-employment and dependent employment, ...
In:
Applied Economics
44 (2012), 14, 1795-1812
| Frank M. Fossen
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Why do people engage in entrepreneurship and commit large parts of their personal wealth to their business, despite comparably low returns and high risk? This paper connects several streams of literature to shed some light on this puzzle and suggests possible future research avenues. Key insights from the literature are that entrepreneurs may operate in imperfect financial markets and that entrepreneurs ...
In:
Douglas Cumming ,
The Oxford Handbook of Entrepreneurial Finance
New York: Oxford University Press
109-132
| Frank M. Fossen
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A personal bankruptcy law that allows for a “fresh start” not only reduces the individual risk involved in entrepreneurship, but may also lead to higher interest rates charged by creditors. Both effects are less relevant for wealthy potential entrepreneurs. This paper illustrates these effects in a model and tests the hypotheses derived by exploiting the introduction of a “fresh start” policy in Germany ...
In:
American Law and Economics Review
16 (2014), 1, 269-312
| Frank M. Fossen