Publications des institutions partenaires
"Social Comparisons and Pro-social Behavior - Testing ‘Conditional Cooperation’ in a Field Experiment"
"People behave pro-socially in a wide variety of situations that standard economic theory is unable to explain. Social comparison is one explanation for such pro-social behavior: people contribute if others contribute or cooperate as well. This paper tests social comparison in a field experiment at the University of Zurich. Each semester every single student has to decide...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/06/2003
The distributional effects of international outsourcing in a 2×2 production model
This paper examines the distributional effects of international outsourcing in a two-sector, two-factor model. The analysis allows for switches between diversified and specialized equilibria. Also, equilibria in which only some firms of a sector outsource (incomplete or partial outsourcing) are considered. It is the interplay of the cost-saving and substitution effects of...
Institution partenaire
English / 29/05/2003
International macroeconomic fluctuations and the current account
Intertemporal models of the current account generally assume that global shocks do not affect the current account. We use this assumption to identify global and country-specific shocks in a bivariate VAR of output and the current account. Cross-country evidence from the G7 economies suggests that this identification works surprisingly well. We then employ our method to collect...
Institution partenaire
English / 20/05/2003
Do Business Students make good Citizens?
Business students are portrayed as behaving too egoistically. The critics call for more socialnresponsibility and good citizenship behavior on the part of business students. We present evidence ofnpro-social behavior in business students. Every student at the University of Zurich has to decide eachnsemester whether he/she wants to contribute to two social funds administrated by the...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/05/2003
Living in Two Neighborhoods - Social Interactions in the Lab
Field evidence suggests that agents belonging to the same group tend to behave similarly,ni.e., behavior exhibits social interaction effects. Testing for such effects raises severenidentification problems. We conduct an experiment that avoids these problems. The mainndesign feature is that each subject simultaneously is a member of two randomly assigned andneconomically identical...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/05/2003
Network Experiments
This paper provides a survey of recent experimental work in eco-nnomics focussing on social and economic networks.The experimentsnconsider networks of coordination and cooperation,buyer-seller net-nworks,and network formation.
Institution partenaire
English / 01/05/2003
Testing Theories of Happiness
"Happiness research in economics takes reported subjective well-being as a proxynmeasure for utility and has already provided many interesting insights about human well-beingnand its determinants. We argue that future research on happiness in economics has a lot ofnpotential, but that it needs to be guided more by theory. We propose two ways to test theories ofnhappiness, and...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/04/2003
Multiple Losses, Ex-Ante Moral Hazard, and the Non-Optimality of the Standard Insurance Contract
Under certain conditions the optimal insurance policy will offer full coverage above a deductible, as Arrow and others have shown long time ago. Interestingly, the same design of insurance policies applies in case of a single loss and ex-ante moral hazard. However, many insurance policies provide coverage against a variety of losses and the possibilities for the insured to affect the...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/04/2003
The survival of the welfare state
This paper provides an analytical characterization of Markov perfect equilibria in a model with repeated voting, where agents vote over distortionary income redistribution. A key result is that the future constituency for redistributive policies depends positively on current redistribution, since this affects both private investments and the future distribution of voters. The model...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/03/2003
Robustness and Real Consequences of Nominal Wage Rigidity
"Recent studies found evidence for nominal wage rigidity during periods of relatively high nominal GDP growth. It has been argued, however, that in an environment with low nominal GDP growth, when nominal wage cuts become customary, workers’ cuts would erode and, hence, firms would no longer hesitate to reduce nominal pay. If this argument is valid nominal wage rigidity...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/03/2003
It's all about Connections: Evidence on Network Formation
We present an economic experiment on network formation, in which subjects can decide to form links to one another. Direct links are costly but being connected is valuable. The game-theoretic basis for our experiment is the model of Bala and Goyal (2000). They distinguish between two scenarios regarding the flow of benefits through a network, the so-called 1-way and 2-way flow model....
Institution partenaire
English / 01/03/2003
Die duale Berufsbildung ist besser als ihr Ruf: eine übereilte Akademisierung schwächt den Standort Schweiz
Zur Steigerung der Schweizer Arbeitsproduktivität wird oft die Erhöhung der Studierendenzahl gefordert. Für die Autorin des folgenden Beitrags führt eine übereilte Akademisierung
in die falsche Richtung. Anzustreben seien vorerst eine Differenzierung der Hochschullandschaft und die Sicherstellung der Schweizer Berufsbildung. Für die Effizienz
der dualen Berufsbildung...
Institution partenaire
Deutsch / 22/02/2003
The Role of Income Aspirations in Individual Happiness
Does individual well-being depend on the absolute level of income and consumption or is it relative to one's aspirations? In a direct empirical test, it is found that higher income aspirations reduce people's utility, ceteris paribus. Individual data on reported satisfaction with life are used as a proxy measure for utility, and income evaluation measures are applied as...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/02/2003
Risk adjustment and risk selection on the sickness fund insurance market in five European countries
From the mid-1990s citizens in Belgium, Germany, Israel, the Netherlands and Switzerland have a guaranteed periodic choice among risk-bearing sickness funds, who are responsible for purchasing their care or providing them with medical care. The rationale of this arrangement is to stimulate the sickness funds to improve efficiency in health care production and to respond to consumers...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/01/2003
Risk adjustment in Switzerland
In Switzerland the new law on health insurance, effective since 1996, introduced pro competitive changes in the market of sickness funds. The legislator expected high mobility between sickness funds of both healthy and sick insured as open enrolment was introduced with the new law. That is why the risk adjustment scheme, that was already introduced 1993, was limited until 2005....
Institution partenaire
English / 01/01/2003
Workplaces in the primary economy and wage pressure in the secondary labor market
This paper develops a two-sector general-equilibrium model in which firms in the primary economy have to create workplaces prior to production and product market competition. For this, we introduce the endogenous sunk-cost approach with two-stage decisions of firms from IO in the macro labor literature. By hypothesizing that technological change has lowered marginal costs but has...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/01/2003
Endogenous Technological Spillovers: Causes and Consequences
We develop a new approach to endogenizing technological spillovers. We analyze a game in which firms can first invest in cost-reducing R&D, then compete on the human-capital market for their knowledge-bearing employees, and finally enter the product market. If R&D employees change firms, spillovers arise. We show that technological spillovers are most likely when they...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/01/2003
Endogenous spillovers and incentives to innovate
We present a new approach to endogenizing technological spillovers. Firms choose levels of a cost-reducing innovation from a continuum before they engage in competition for each other's R&D-employees. Successful bids for the competitor's employee then result in higher levels of cost reduction. Finally, firms enter product market competition. We apply the approach to the...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/01/2003
Lobbying against Environmental Regulation vs. Lobbying for Loopholes
We analyze the determinants of environmental policy when two firms engage in two types of lobbying against a restriction on allowed pollution: General lobbying increases the total amount of allowed pollution, which is beneficial for both firms. Private lobbying increases the individual pollution standard of the lobbying firm, but has a negative or zero effect on the allowed emissions...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/01/2003
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