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  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Can't Get It out of My Head: Age Differences in Affective Responsiveness Vary with Preoccupation and Elapsed Time after Daily Hassles

    To better understand age differences in negative affective responses to daily hassles, the current study investigated how responses may depend on how much time has elapsed after the hassle and how much one still thinks about the hassle. In an experience-sampling approach with mobile phones, 397 participants aged 12 to 88 years reported their momentary activating (e.g., angry) and deactivating (e.g., ...

    In: Emotion 15 (2015), 2, S. 257-269 | Cornelia Wrzus, Gloria Luong, Gert G. Wagner, Michaela Riediger
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Does State Antitrust Enforcement Drive Establishment Exit?

    While studies have examined motivations for businesses to exit and relocate in response to tax and regulatory policies at the state level, no previous work has considered whether U.S. state antitrust enforcement may have similar effects. The results of this article suggest that state-level antitrust (even when coordinated with the federal government) plays a fairly minor role in the exit decision of ...

    In: Journal of Competition Law & Economics 11 (2015), 1, S. 85-106 | Robert M. Feinberg, Thomas A. Husted, Florian Szücs
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Local Day Care Quality and Maternal Employment: Evidence from East and West Germany

    By investigating how locally available early childhood education and care quality relates to maternal employment choices, this study extends the literature, which mostly has focused on the importance of day care availability or costs. The authors provide differentiated analyses by the youngest child's age and for West and East Germany to examine moderating influences, such as work-care cultures, in ...

    In: Journal of Marriage and Family 77 (2015), 3, S. 712-729 | Pia S. Schober, C. Katharina Spieß
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    A Solution Concept for Network Games: The Role of Multilateral Interactions

    We propose an allocation rule that takes into account the importance of both players and their links and characterize it for a fixed network. Our characterization is along the lines of the characterization of the Position value for Network games by van den Nouweland and Slikker (2012). The allocation rule so defined admits multilateral interactions among the players through their links which distinguishes ...

    In: European Journal of Operational Research 243 (2015), 3, S. 912-920 | Surajit Borkotokey, Rajnish Kumar, Sudipta Sarangi
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    On the Representation of Demand-Side Management in Power System Models

    DSM (demand-side management) merits increased attention by power system modelers. Numerical models should incorporate DSM constraints in a complete and consistent way. Otherwise, flawed DSM patterns and distorted conclusions on the system benefits of demand-side management are inevitable. Building on a model formulation put forward by Göransson et al. (2014), it is first suggested to include an additional ...

    In: Energy 84 (2015), S. 840-845 | Alexander Zerrahn, Wolf-Peter Schill
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Career Prospects and Effort Incentives: Evidence from Professional Soccer

    it is difficult to test the prediction that future career prospects create implicit effort incentives because researchers cannot randomly “assign” career prospects to economic agents. To overcome this challenge, we use data from professional soccer, where employees of the same club face different external career opportunities depending on their nationality. We test whether the career prospect of being ...

    In: Management Science 62 (2016), 6, S. 1645-1667 | Jeanine Miklós-Thal, Hannes Ullrich
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Intergenerational Downward Mobility in Educational Attainment and Occupational Careers in West Germany in the Twentieth Century

    What happens in the occupational careers of men if the intergenerational continuity in status reproduction is disrupted by the failure to reproduce the parental level of educational attainment? We frame this failure as a risk for intergenerational status maintenance and ask whether such a risk induces extra effort by way of compensation. By studying eight birth cohorts born between 1919 and 1971 characterized ...

    In: European Sociological Review 31(2015), 2, S. 172-183 | Martin Diewald, Wiebke Schulz, Tina Baier
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    A New Look at Intergenerational Mobility in Germany: Compared to the U.S.

    Motivated by contradictory evidence on intergenerational mobility in Germany, I present a cross-country comparison of Germany and the U.S., reassessing the question of whether intergenerational mobility is higher in Germany than in the U.S. I can reproduce the standard result from the literature, which states that the German intergenerational elasticity estimates are lower than those for the U.S. However, ...

    In: The Review of Income and Wealth 62 (2016), 4, S. 650-667 | Daniel D. Schnitzlein
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    The Value of a Statistical Life in a Road Safety Context: A Review of the Current Literature

    This paper summarizes the state-of-the-art for assessing the value of a statistical life (VSL) as a component of the costs of road accidents. It focuses on the most popular approaches for assessing the VSL, with respect to its theoretical foundations, current state-of-research and empirical evidence. Our paper also provides a first (to our knowledge) compendium of results for the VSL based on Stated ...

    In: Transport Reviews 35 (2015), 4, S. 488-511 | Francisco J. Bahamonde Birke, Uwe Kunert, Heike Link
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    The Scapegoat Theory of Exchange Rates: The First Tests

    The scapegoat theory of exchange rates (2 and 5) suggests that market participants may attach excessive weight to individual economic fundamentals, which are picked as “scapegoats” to rationalize observed currency fluctuations at times when exchange rates are driven by unobservable shocks. Using novel survey data that directly measure foreign exchange scapegoats for 12 exchange rates, we find empirical ...

    In: Journal of Monetary Economics 70 (2015), 1-21 | Marcel Fratzscher, Dagfinn Rime, Lucio Sarno, Gabriele Zinna
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    The Transmission of Oil and Food Prices to Consumer Prices: Evidence for the MENA Countries

    This paper investigates the effects of global oil and food price shocks to consumer prices in Middle East-North African (MENA) countries using threshold cointegration methods. Oil and food price shocks increase domestic prices in the long run, whereby the impact of food prices dominates. While global prices are weakly exogenous, consumer prices respond to deviations from the equilibrium relationship. ...

    In: International Economics and Economic Policy 12 (2015), 1, S. 143-161 | Ansgar Belke, Christian Dreger
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Reducing Binge Drinking? The Effect of a Ban on Late-Night-Off-Premise Alcohol Sales on Alcohol-Related Hospital Stays in Germany

    Excessive alcohol consumption among young people is a major public health concern. On March 1, 2010, the German state of Baden-Württemberg banned the sale of alcoholic beverages between 10 pm and 5 am at off-premise outlets (e.g., gas stations, kiosks, supermarkets). We use rich monthly administrative data from a 70% random sample of all hospitalizations during the years 2007–2011 in Germany in order ...

    In: Journal of Public Economics 123 (2015), S. 55-77 | Jan Marcus, Thomas Siedler
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Banking Market Structure and Macroeconomic Stability: Are Low-Income Countries Special?

    Does the structure of banking markets affect macroeconomic volatility and, if yes, is this link different in low-income countries? In this paper, we explore the channels through which the structure of banking markets affects macroeconomic volatility. Our research has three main findings. First, we study whether idiosyncratic volatility at the bank level can impact aggregate volatility. We find weak ...

    In: Pacific Economic Review 20 (2015), 1, S. 73-100 | Franziska Bremus, Claudia M. Buch
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    New Spain: France Transmission Line: A Cost-Benefit Analysis

    Die Kosten der geplanten unterirdisch verlegten Hochspannungs-Gleichstrom-Übertragungsleitung (HGÜ) zwischen Spanien und Frankreich übersteigen die Investitionskosten einer vergleichbaren Wechselstrom-Freileitung. Die Frage stellt sich, ob die Mehrkosten mit ausreichendem Zusatznutzen für die Gesellschaft, wie zum Beispiel erhöhter Versorgungssicherheit, zu rechtfertigen sind. Aus diesem Grund wurden ...

    In: Zeitschrift für Energiewirtschaft 39 (2015), 1, S. 19-32 | Stefan Perras, Friedrich Kunz, Dominik Möst
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    All Quiet on the Eastern Front? Disruption Scenarios of Russian Natural Gas Supply to Europe

    The 2014 Russian–Ukrainian crisis reignited European concerns about natural gas supply security recalling the experiences of 2006 and 2009. However, the European supply situation, regulation and infrastructure have changed, with better diversified import sources, EU member states being better connected and a common regulation on the security of supply has been introduced. Nevertheless, European dependency ...

    In: Energy Policy 80 (2015), S. 177-189 | Philipp M. Richter, Franziska Holz
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Measuring Transnationality of Immigrants in Germany: Prevalence and Relationship with Social Inequalities

    The scope of immigrants' transnational ties and the relationship to their social position is subject to a controversial debate that suggests a dualistic picture. On the one hand, globalization theorists argue that an elite of highly educated and economically most successful professionals intensively engages in and benefits from transnationality. On the other hand, most scholars in migration and assimilation ...

    In: Ethnic and Racial Studies 38 (2015), 9, S. 1497-1519 | Margit Fauser, Elisabeth Liebau, Sven Voigtländer, Hidayet Tuncer, Thomas Faist, Oliver Razum
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Turning back to Turkey - or Turning the Back on Germany? Remigration Intentions and Behavior of Turkish Immigrants in Germany between 1984 and 2011

    Der Beitrag der Frage nach, wie sich die Remigrationsabsichten und das Remigrationsverhalten türkischstämmigerEinwanderer in Deutschland im Zeitverlauf verändert haben, und wertet dazu alle Erhebungswellen dessozio-çkonomischen Panels (SOEP) ereignisdatenanalytisch aus. Die Befunde zeigen, dass Remigrationsabsichten und-raten türkischstämmiger Einwanderer seit der Jahrtausendwende angestiegen sind, ...

    In: Zeitschrift für Soziologie 44 (2015), 1, S. 22-41 | Claudia Diehl, Elisabeth Liebau
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Income and Wealth Inequality after the Financial Crisis: The Case of Germany

    The topic of rising income inequality does not only gain in relevance since the two prominent reports by the OECD (Growing unequal? Income Distribution and Poverty in OECD Countries, Paris 2008; Divided we stand—Why inequality keeps rising, Paris 2011) but rather since the financial crisis. So far there is only scarce empirical evidence–besides a rather broad literature dealing with the US–about the ...

    In: Empirica 42 (2015), 2, S. 371-390 | Markus M. Grabka
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    Mittelstandsorientierte Innovationspolitik befördert den Wissenstransfer

    In: Forschung : Politik, Strategie, Management 7 (2014), 1/2, S. 40-45 | Alexander Eickelpasch
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    A Global Perspective on the Future of Natural Gas: Resources, Trade, and Climate Constraints

    Natural gas plays an important role in the global energy system as an input to power generation, heating, and industry. This article identifies key drivers and uncertainties for natural gas markets in the coming decades. These include the availability of natural gas from conventional and unconventional sources, the role of international trade, and the impact of climate policies. We build on model-based ...

    In: Review of Environmental Economics and Policy 9 (2015), Iss. 1, 85-106 | Franziska Holz, Philipp M. Richter, Ruud Egging
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