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296 results, from 41
  • Brown Bag Seminar Industrial Economics

    Emergency Aid for the Self-Employed in the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Flash in the Pan?

    The self-employed are among those facing the highest probability of strong income losses during the COVID-19 pandemic. Governments in many countries introduced support programs to support the self-employed, including the German federal government, which approved a €50bn emergency aid program at the end of March 2020 offering one-off lump-sum payments of up to €15,000 to those facing...

    07.05.2021| Caroline Stiel, DIW Berlin
  • DIW Weekly Report 52/53 / 2020

    Fiscal Rules Mitigate Economic Setbacks during Crises

    91 countries around the world have established fiscal rules to limit national debt and/or budget deficits. Using data from previous natural disasters, this report investigates how these fiscal rules affect overall economic development following a crisis. The results show countries with fiscal rules fare better after such shocks than those without. GDP, private consumption, and investments develop markedly ...

    2020| Alexander Kriwoluzky, Laura Pagenhardt, Malte Rieth
  • Diskussionspapiere 1864 / 2020

    Financial Education Affects Financial Knowledge and Downstream Behaviors

    We study the rapidly growing literature on the causal effects of financial education programs in a meta-analysis of 76 randomized experiments with a total sample size of over 160,000 individuals. The evidence shows that financial education programs have, on average, positive causal treatment effects on financial knowledge and downstream financial behaviors. Treatment effects are economically meaningful ...

    2020| Tim Kaiser, Annamaria Lusardi, Lukas Menkhoff, Carly Urban
  • SOEPpapers 1139 / 2021

    Why a Labour Market Boom Does Not Necessarily Bring Down Inequality: Putting Together Germany’s Inequality Puzzle

    After an economically tough start into the new millennium, Germany experienced an unprecedented employment boom after 2005 only stopped by the COVID-19 pandemic. Persistently high levels of inequality despite a booming labour market and drastically falling unemployment rates constituted a puzzle, suggesting either that the German job miracle mainly benefitted individuals in the mid- or high-income range ...

    2021| Martin Biewen, Miriam Sturm
  • Brown Bag Seminar Industrial Economics

    State Aid for Environmental Protection and Energy – Focus on Electro-intensive Firms

    The European Commission commissioned an international consortium including the DIW Berlin with a background study on State aid in the field of environmental protection and energy. The results of the study are meant to support the Commission in the revision of the EU Guidelines on State aid for environmental protection and energy (EEAG). One key focus of the study was to assess the current rules...

    21.05.2021| Joanna Piechucka, DIW Berlin
  • Externe Monographien

    The Assessment of Depreciation in the Case of Intangible Assets

    This paper sets out a framework for the analysis of public investments, tangible and intangible, at the level of detail needed for the economic analysis of impacts of public policies influencing economic growth. To do this, we broaden the concept of capital in the public sector from that which is mostly tangible (e.g. physical infrastructure) to that which also includes intangibles and long-lasting ...

    Valencia: Instituto Valenciano de Investigaciones Económicas, 2015, 30 S.
    (SPINTAN Working Paper Series ; 3)
    | Bernd Görzig, Martin Gornig
  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Sovereign Risk, Interbank Freezes, and Aggregate Fluctuations

    This paper shows how spillovers from sovereign risk to banks׳ access to wholesale funding establish a bank-sovereign nexus. In a dynamic stochastic general equilibrium set-up, heterogeneous banks give rise to an interbank market where government bonds are used as collateral. Government borrowing under limited commitment is costly ex ante as bank funding conditions tighten when the quality of collateral ...

    In: European Economic Review 87 (2016), S. 34-61 | Philipp Engler, Christoph Große Steffen
  • Research Project

    Local public goods

    Completed Project| Public Economics
  • Diskussionspapiere 1631 / 2016

    Hysteresis and Fiscal Policy

    Empirical studies support the hysteresis hypothesis that recessions have a permanent effect on the level of output. We analyze the implications of hysteresis for fiscal policy in a DSGE model. We assume a simple learning-by-doing mechanism where demand-driven changes in employment can affect the level of productivity permanently, leading to hysteresis in output. We show that the fiscal output multiplier ...

    2016| Philipp Engler, Juha Tervala
  • Diskussionspapiere 1724 / 2018

    Early Warning System of Government Debt Crises

    The European debt crisis has revealed serious deficiencies and risks on a proper functioning of the monetary union. Against this backdrop, early warning systems are of crucial importance. In this study that focuses on euro area member states, the robustness of early warning systems to predict crises of government debt is evaluated. Robustness is captured via several dimensions, such as the chronology ...

    2018| Christian Dreger, Konstantin A. Kholodilin
296 results, from 41
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