Publications des institutions partenaires
¿Cómo las grandes empresas europeas experimentan los cambios mundiales?
Institution partenaire
Espagnol / 01/01/2004
La contribution des IFRS au gouvernement d'entreprise : apports et limites
Institution partenaire
Français / 01/01/2004
Interkulturelle Philosophie Disziplin, Orientierung, Praxis? Ein Literaturbericht
Institution partenaire
Deutsch / 01/01/2004
Satisfaction and Interpersonal Closeness as Determinants of Relationship Commitment in Business-to-Business Relationships
The theory of embedded markets states that economic transactions are embedded in social relationships, and economic actors are influenced by both marketing variables and relationship properties. That is, within an exchange relationship actors derive utility from the attributes of a focal product and from interpersonal relationships. We investigate the different roles of satisfaction...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/01/2004
Social protest and policy change: Ecology, antinuclear, and peace movements in comparative perspective
While movement activists spend much of their time and energy trying to change the world, our theoretical and empirical knowledge in this field is still relatively poor. In Social Protest and Policy Change, Marco Giugni offers a systematic and empirically grounded analysis of the impact of three major contemporary movements on public policy. Using a comparative and historical...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/01/2004
Unemployment and active labour market policies: Towards an evaluation
Institution partenaire
English / 01/01/2004
Les théories de la justice. Application aux problèmes de l'eau. Conférence d'introduction
Il est nécessaire de souligner la très grande complexité du thème de la justice, quels que soient les domaines auxquels ce thème est appliqué. Je me focaliserai bien sûr plus particulièrement sur la thématique de l'eau en m'inspirant des grandes théories de la justice, celles de Aristote, de Michael Walzer, de John Rawls, de Robert Nozick.
Institution partenaire
Français / 01/01/2004
Management of non-maturing deposits by multistage stochastic programming
The management of non-maturing account positions in a bank's balance like savings and sight deposits as well as certain types of variable-rate mortgages is complicated by the embedded options that its clients may exercise. In addition to the usual interest rate risk, uncertainty in the timing and amount of cash flows must be taken into account when investment or refinancing...
Institution partenaire
English / 16/12/2003
Reconciling rent-seekers and donators – the governance structure of open source
Software developed and producedin open source projects has become an importantcompetitor in the software industry. Since itcan be downloaded for free and no wages arepaid to developers, the open source endeavorseems to rest on voluntary contributions byhobbyists. In the discussion of this puzzle twobasic patterns of argumentation stand out. Inwhat we call rent-seeker approaches,...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/12/2003
Beyond market power: Efficiency explanations for the basic structures of north American major league organizations
So far the “market power view” has been the dominant perspective of looking at the institutional setup of North American major leagues. As useful as the insights generated by this approach may be at the level of competition policy, they do not shed much light on the question of internal league organization. The reason is straightforward. A wide range of hybrid as well as all...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/12/2003
Best-reply matching in games
We study a new equilibrium concept in non-cooperative games, where players follow a behavioral rule called best-reply matching. Under this rule a player matches the probability of playing a pure strategy to the probability that this strategy is a best reply. Kosfeld, Droste, and Voorneveld [Games and Economic Behavior 40 (2002) 270] show that best-reply matching equilibria are...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/12/2003
Limits to Arbitrage when Market Participation Is Restricted
There is an extensive literature claiming that it is often di*cultnto make use of arbitrage opportunities in *nancial markets. Thisnpaper provides a new reason why existing arbitrage opportunitiesnmight not be seized. We consider a world with short-lived securities,nno short-selling constraints and no transaction costs. We show thatnto exploit all existing arbitrage opportunities,...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/12/2003
Fairness, Errors and the Power of Competition
One of the most basic questions in economics concerns the effects of competition onnmarket prices. We show that the neglect of both fairness concerns and decision errors prevents ansatisfactory understanding of how competition affects prices. We conducted experiments whichndemonstrate that the introduction of even a very small amount of competition to a bilateralnexchange situation...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/12/2003
The Role of Social Work Norms in Job Searching and Subjective Well-Being
Social norms are usually neglected in economics, because they are to anlarge extent enforced through non-market interactions and difficult to isolatenempirically. In this paper, we offer a direct measure of the social norm to work andnwe show that this norm has important economic effects. The stronger the norm, thenmore quickly unemployed people find a new job. This behavior can be...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/12/2003
On Cheating and Whistle-Blowing
We study the role of whistleblowing in the following inspection game. Two agents who compete for a prize can either behave legally or illegally. After the competition, a controller investigates the agents’ behavior. This inspection game has a unique (Bayesian) equilibrium in mixed strategies. We then add a whistleblowing stage, where the controller asks the loser to blow the whistle...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/12/2003
Fraudulent Accounting and Other Doping Games
From a game theoretic point of view, fraudulent accounting to em-bellishnthe financial status of a firm and the use of drugs to enhancenperformance in sports are very similar. We study the replicator dy-namicsnof both applications within the same model. We allow for het-erogenousnpopulations, such as highly talented versus more mediocrenathletes, or high quality managers versus less...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/12/2003
How Did the German Health Care Reform of 1997 Change the Distribution of the Demand for Health Services?
I consider the problem of evaluating the effect of a health care reform on the demand for doctor visits when the effect is potentially different in different parts of the outcome distribution. Quantile regression is a useful technique for studying such heterogeneous treatment effects. Recent progree has been made to extend such methods to applications with a count dependent variable...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/12/2003
Do all networks facilitate international commerce? US law firms and the international market for corporate control
This paper estimates the effects of several American law firms' international networks of offices on the total value of overseas mergers and acquisitions (M&A) by US corporations. Nowdays many nations can review proposed mergers and US law firms help clients overcome such regulatory hurdles, effectively greasing the market for corporate control. However, they can also oppose...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/12/2003
Earnings Differentials between German and French Speakers in Switzerland
The paper analyses the effect of mother tongue on labor market outcomes of Swiss residents. This type of analysis can shed light on an important policy question. Is the Swiss labor market well integrated, or can one find instead segmentation along language borders? Improving on previous research in this area, we use a nationally representative household survey, the Swiss Household...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/11/2003
Money and Reciprocity
Based on an experimental analysis of a simple monetary economy we argue that a monetarynsystem is more stable than one would expect from individual rationality. We show thatnpositive reciprocity stabilizes the monetary system, provided every participant considers thenfeedbacks of his choice to the stationary equilibrium. If however the participants do not playnstationary strategies...
Institution partenaire
English / 01/11/2003
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