K
Konstantinos Tatsiramos
Researcher at University of Luxembourg
Publications - 79
Citations - 2246
Konstantinos Tatsiramos is an academic researcher from University of Luxembourg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Unemployment & Earnings. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 77 publications receiving 1932 citations. Previous affiliations of Konstantinos Tatsiramos include University of Nottingham & German Institute for Economic Research.
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Estimating worldwide effects of non-pharmaceutical interventions on COVID-19 incidence and population mobility patterns using a multiple-event study.
TL;DR: In this article, the average dynamic effect of each intervention on the incidence of COVID-19 and on people's whereabouts was estimated by developing a statistical model that accounts for the contemporaneous adoption of multiple interventions.
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Unemployment Insurance in Europe: Unemployment Duration and Subsequent Employment Stability
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide evidence on the effect of unemployment benefits on unemployment and employment duration in Europe, using individual data from the European Community Household Panel for eight countries, using a multivariate discrete proportional hazard model, controlling for observed and unobserved individual heterogeneity.
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Benefit Duration, Unemployment Duration and Job Match Quality: A Regression-Discontinuity Approach
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a sharp discontinuity in the maximum duration of unemployment benefits in Germany, which increases from 12 months to 18 months at the age of 45, to identify the effect of extended benefit duration on unemployment duration and post-unemployment outcomes.
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Benefit duration, unemployment duration and job match quality: a regression‐discontinuity approach
TL;DR: The authors used a sharp discontinuity in the maximum duration of benefit entitlement to identify the effect of extended benefit duration on unemployment duration and post-unemployment outcomes (employment stability and re-employment wages).
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Lockdown Strategies, Mobility Patterns and COVID-19
TL;DR: A multiple-events model is developed and it is established that policies curb the epidemic by changing population mobility patterns in a manner consistent with time-use and epidemiologically relevant considerations.