Refine
Year of publication
- 2024 (5)
- 2023 (8)
- 2022 (7)
- 2021 (6)
- 2020 (11)
- 2019 (4)
- 2018 (3)
- 2017 (2)
- 2016 (3)
- 2015 (5)
- 2014 (6)
- 2013 (12)
- 2012 (10)
- 2011 (3)
- 2010 (2)
- 2009 (6)
- 2008 (11)
- 2007 (15)
- 2006 (7)
- 2005 (5)
- 2004 (2)
- 2003 (7)
- 2002 (7)
- 2001 (5)
- 2000 (4)
- 1999 (14)
- 1998 (7)
- 1997 (6)
- 1996 (7)
- 1995 (5)
- 1994 (9)
- 1993 (3)
- 1992 (3)
- 1991 (3)
- 1990 (5)
- 1987 (1)
- 1986 (2)
- 1984 (1)
Institute
- Fachbereich Wirtschaftswissenschaften (222) (remove)
Language
- English (222) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (116)
- Conference Proceeding (55)
- Book (32)
- Part of a Book (15)
- Working Paper (3)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
Keywords
- Telekommunikationsmarkt (4)
- Führung (3)
- Leadership (3)
- rebound-effect (2)
- regulation (2)
- sustainability (2)
- Active learning (1)
- Bank-issued Warrants (1)
- Brands (1)
- Breitband Markt (1)
This Research Briefing, issued in July 2010, concluded that:
- Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in Europe have long called for a matching legal form valid across the EU (similar to that of the European company (SE) for large firms)
- The main benefits would be the availability of uniform Europe-wide company structures, significant cost reductions for businesses and further integration of the internal market
- Given the differing national views regarding the concrete features of the new legal form there is currently no sign of an agreement being reached at the European level in the short term; however, it is possible that progress will be made in negotiations during the year
- The key issues being discussed in depth are company formation, transnationality and employee participation rights in the new European private company (SPE).
Divided government is often thought of as causing legislative deadlock. I investigate the link between divided government and economic reforms using a novel data set on welfare reforms in US states between 1978 and 2010. Panel data regressions show that, under divided government, a US state is around 25% more likely to adopt a welfare reform than under unified government. Several robustness checks confirm this counter-intuitive finding. Case study evidence suggests an explanation based on policy competition between governor, senate, and house.
Does stiffer electoral competition reduce political shirking? For a micro-analysis of this question, I construct a new data set spanning the years 2005 to 2012 covering biographical and political information about German Members of Parliament (MPs), including their attendance rates in voting sessions. For the parliament elected in 2009, I show that indeed opposition party MPs who expect to face a close race in their district show significantly and relevantly lower absence rates in parliament beforehand. MPs of governing parties seem not to react significantly to electoral competition. These results are confirmed by an analysis of the parliament elected in 2005, by several robustness checks, and also by employing an instrumental variable strategy exploiting convenient peculiarities of the German electoral system. The study also shows how MPs elected via party lists react to different levels of electoral competition.
This paper uses a quantitative analysis to examine the interdependence and impact of resource rents on socio-economic development from 2002 to 2017. Nigeria and Norway have been chosen as reference countries due to their abundance of natural resources by similar economic performance, while the ranking in the Human Development Index differs dramatically. As the Human Development Index provides insight into a country’s cultural and socio-economic characteristics and development in addition to economic indicators, it allows a comparison of the two countries. The hypothesis presented and discussed in this paper was researched before. A qualitative research approach was used in the author’s master’s thesis “The Human Development Index (HDI) as a Reflection of Resource Abundance (using Nigeria and Norway as a case study)” in 2018. The management of scarce resources is an important aspect in the development of modern countries and those on the threshold of becoming industrialised nations. The effects of a mistaken resource management are not only of a purely economic nature but also of a social and socio-economic nature. In order to present a partial aspect of these dependencies and influences this paper uses a quantitative analysis to examine the interdependence and impact of resource rents on socio-economic development from 2002 to 2017. Nigeria and Norway have been chosen as reference countries due to their abundance of natural resources by similar economic performance, while the ranking in the Human Development Index differs significantly. As the Human Development Index provides insight into a country’s cultural and socio-economic characteristics and development in addition to economic indicators, it allows a comparison of the two countries. This paper found out in a holistic perspective that (not or poorly managed) resource wealth in itself has a negative impact on socio-economic development and significantly reduces the productivity of the citizens of a state. This is expressed in particular for the years 2002 till 2017 in a negative correlation of GDP per capita and HDI value with the share respectively the size of resources in the GDP of a country.