Publications des institutions partenaires
Using Markets to Measure Pre-War Threat Assessments: The Nordic Countries facing World War II
Nordic historians have asserted for a long time that in the Nordic countries only few people, if any, perceived increased threats of war prior to the World War II outbreak. This would explain, and possibly excuse, why their governments did not mobilize their armies until it was too late. This paper questions this established notion by deriving new estimates of widely held war threat…
Institution partenaire
English / 01/11/2006
Foreign Aid, Political Instability, and Economic Growth
Relying on a simple endogenous growth model, this paper highlights a political instability effect as a potential explanation for why foreign aid is frequently ineffective with respect to economic performance. In the present framework, the role of the state is to fund institutions allowing for ongoing technology adoption and hence long-run growth.nHowever, providing a self-interested…
Institution partenaire
English / 01/11/2006
A Product-Market Theory of Industry-Specific Training
We develop a product market theory that explains why firms provide their workers with skills that are sufficiently general to be potentially useful for competitors. We consider a model where firms first decide whether to invest in industry-specific human capital, then make wage offers for each others’ trained employees and finally engage in imperfect product market competition.…
Institution partenaire
English / 01/11/2006
Acceptable costs and risk adjustment : policy choices and ethical trade-offs
The main objective of risk adjustment in systems of regulated competition on healthinsurance markets is the removal of incentives for undesirable risk selection. We introduce a simple conceptual framework to clarify how the definition of "acceptable costs" and the distinction between legitimate and illegitimate risk adjusters imply diffcult ethical trade-offs between equity…
Institution partenaire
English / 01/11/2006
Optimal insurance contracts without the non-negativity constraint on indemnities: revisited
In the literature on optimal indemnity schedules, indemnities are usually restricted to be non-negative. Keeler [1974] and Gollier [1987] show that this constraint might well bind: insured could get higher expected utility if insurance contracts would allow payments from the insured to the insurer at some losses. This paper extends Collier’s findings by allowing for negative…
Institution partenaire
English / 19/10/2006
MBA Programme unter der Lupe – Reputationmassgebend
Institution partenaire
English / 14/10/2006
Income distribution and demand-induced innovation
We introduce non-homothetic preferences into an innovation-based growth model and study how income and wealth inequality affect economic growth. We identify a (positive) price effect -- where increasing inequality allows innovators to charge higher prices and (negative) market-size effects -- with higher inequality implying smaller markets for new goods and/or a slower transition of…
Institution partenaire
English / 01/10/2006
Evaluations: Hidden Costs, Questionable Benefits, and Superior Alternatives
Research evaluation is praised as the symbol of modern quality management. We claim firstly, performance evaluations in research have higher costs than normally assumed, because the evaluated persons and institutions systematically change their behavior andndevelop counter strategies. Moreover, intrinsic work motivation is crowded out and undesired lock-in effects take place.…
Institution partenaire
English / 01/10/2006
Corporate governance for knowledge production: theoretical foundations and practical implications
Agency Theory as the dominant view of Corporate Governance disregards that the key task of firm governance is to generate, accumulate, transfer, and protect firm specific knowledge. Three different foundations to the theory of the firm which underpin different concepts of corporate governance are discussed: The traditional view of the firm as a nexus of contracts, the view of the…
Institution partenaire
English / 01/09/2006
Was kann die Corporate Governance in der Schweiz von der Public Governance lernen?
Das vorliegende Papier schlägt eine neue Sicht auf Probleme der Corporate Governance vor. Es wird analysiert, wie der Unternehmenssektor bezüglich Governance vom politischen Bereich lernen kann. Demokratien haben einzigartige Institutionen der Führung und Kontrolle von Akteuren im öffentlichen Bereich geschaffen, welche neue Einsichten für die Governance von Unternehmen geben können…
Institution partenaire
English / 01/09/2006
Towards a Constitutional Theory of Corporate Governance
The idea that there is a uniformly “optimal” governance structure for corporationsnfeatures prominently in current debates and policy proposals. In this paper, we propose andifferent, constitutional theory of corporate governance: the criterion for a good corporatengovernance structure is whether it is freely chosen by the shareholders. We illustrate ournapproach by comparing the…
Institution partenaire
English / 01/09/2006
Making prospect theory fit for finance
The prospect theory of Kahneman and Tversky (in Econometrica 47(2), 263–291, 1979) and the cumulative prospect theory of Tversky and Kahneman (in J. Risk uncertainty 5, 297–323, 1992) are descriptive models for decision making that summarize several violations of the expected utility theory. This paper gives a survey of applications of prospect theory to the portfolio choice problem…
Institution partenaire
English / 01/09/2006
Learning in and about Games
We study finitely repeated 2 / 2 normal form games, where playersnhave incomplete information about their opponents’ payoffs. In a laboratory experiment we investigate whether players (a) learn the game they are playing, (b) learn to predict the behavior of their opponent, and (c)nlearn to play according to a Nash equilibrium of the repeated game. Ournresults show that the success in…
Institution partenaire
English / 01/09/2006
Entrepreneurship as a non-profit-seeking activity
It is typically assumed that people engage in entrepreneurship because there are profits to be made. In contrast to this view, this paper argues that entrepreneurship is more adequately characterized as a non-profit-seeking activity. Evidence from a broad range of authors and academic fields is discussed showing that entrepreneurship does quite generally not pay in monetary terms.…
Institution partenaire
English / 01/09/2006
Money, Credit and Banking
In monetary models where agents are subject to trading shocksnthere is typically an ex-post inefficiency since some agents are holding idle balances while others are cash constrained. This problem creates a role for financial intermediaries, such as banks, who accept nominal deposits and make nominal loans. In general, financial intermediation improves the allocation. The gains in…
Institution partenaire
English / 01/08/2006
Social Interactions and Schooling Decisions
The aim of this paper is to study whether schooling choices are affected by social interactions. Such social interactions may be important because children enjoy spending time with other children or parents learn from other parents about the ability of their children. Identificationnis based on a randomized intervention that grants a cash subsidy encouraging schoolnattendance among a…
Institution partenaire
English / 01/08/2006
Institution Formation in Public Goods Games
Centralized sanctioning institutions are of utmost importance for overcomingnfree-riding tendencies and enforcing outcomes that maximize group welfare in socialndilemma situations. However, little is known about how such institutions come intonexistence. In this paper we investigate, both theoretically and experimentally, thenendogenous formation of institutions in a public goods…
Institution partenaire
English / 01/08/2006
An Application of Global Games to Signalling Model
In a first attempt to apply the global games methodology tonsignalling games, Ewerhart and Wichardt (2004) analyse a beer-quiche type signalling game with additional imperfect information about the preferences of the receiver. Their approach allows them to dismiss the unreasonable pool-ning on quiche equilibrium. This paper revisits their example and discusses how an extension of the…
Institution partenaire
English / 01/07/2006
How do Extended Benefits affect Unemployment Duration? A Regression Discontinuity Approach
This paper studies a program that extends the maximum duration of unemployment benefits from 30 weeks to 209 weeks. Interestingly, this program is targeted to individuals aged 50nyears or older, living in certain eligible regions in Austria. In the evaluation, I use sharp discontinuities in treatment assignment at age 50 and at the border between eligible regions and control regions…
Institution partenaire
English / 01/07/2006
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