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Institution

Economic and Social Research Institute

NonprofitDublin, Ireland
About: Economic and Social Research Institute is a nonprofit organization based out in Dublin, Ireland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & European union. The organization has 425 authors who have published 1530 publications receiving 41567 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyse 446 location decisions of R&D activities by multinational firms incorporated in the European Union over 1999-2006 and find that on average, the location probability of a representative research affiliate increased with agglomeration economies, human capital, proximity to centres of research excellence and the research and innovation capacity of the region.

93 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyse the earnings of immigrants from the EU's new member states (NMS) using a large-scale dataset with information on employees in Ireland and find that the average earnings difference between these immigrants and natives is between 10 and 18 per cent, depending on the controls used.
Abstract: We analyse the earnings of immigrants from the EU's new member states (NMS) using a large‐scale dataset with information on employees in Ireland. We find that the average earnings difference between these immigrants and natives is between 10 and 18 per cent, depending on the controls used. However, the difference is found to be lower for people at the lower end of the earnings distribution. It is also generally lower for people at the lower end of the education distribution. We find mixed evidence on whether unions have an impact on the wages of immigrants from the NMS, although such immigrants appear to suffer a wage penalty as a result of being in firms that provided training to a significant proportion of their workforce.

92 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the medium-term effects of a carbon tax on growth and CO2 emissions in Ireland, a small open economy, were analyzed and it was shown that most of the effect on the economy is due to changes in the competitiveness of the manufacturing and market services sectors.
Abstract: This paper analyses the medium-term effects of a carbon tax on growth and CO2 emissions in Ireland, a small open economy. We find that a double dividend exists if the carbon tax revenue is recycled through reduced income taxes. If the revenue is recycled by giving a lump-sum transfer to households, a double dividend is unlikely. We also determine that a greater incidence of the carbon tax falls on capital than on labour. When combined with a decrease in income tax, there is a clear shift of the tax burden from labour to capital. Finally, most of the effect on the economy is due to changes in the competitiveness of the manufacturing and market services sectors.

91 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors seek to explain variations in levels of deprivation between EU countries by finding that the relationship between income and life-style deprivation varies across countries, and that cross-national differences in deprivation might, in significant part, be due not only to variation in household and individual characteristics that are associated with disadvantage but also to the differential impact of such variables across countries and indeed welfare regimes.
Abstract: In this paper we seek to explain variations in levels of deprivation between EU countries. The starting-point of our analysis is the finding that the relationship between income and life-style deprivation varies across countries. Given our understanding of the manner in which the income-deprivation mismatch may arise from the limitations of current income as a measure of command over resources, the pattern of variation seems to be consistent with our expectations of the variable degree to which welfare-state regimes achieve decommodification and smooth income flows. This line of reasoning suggests that cross-national differences in deprivation might, in significant part, be due not only to variation in household and individual characteristics that are associated with disadvantage but also to the differential impact of such variables across countries and indeed welfare regimes. To test this hypothesis, we have taken advantage of the ECHP (European Community Household Panel) comparative data set in order to...

91 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the causes of the degree of success which the Irish indigenous software industry has attained in terms of growth and international competitiveness, and examine the role of Irish factor conditions, domestic demand conditions, related and supporting industries.
Abstract: Since the mid-1980s, the software industry has been one of the fastest growing sectors of the Irish economy. This article examines the causes of the degree of success which the Irish indigenous software industry has attained in terms of growth and international competitiveness. In exploring the development of its competitive advantage we examine, in turn, the role of Irish factor conditions, domestic demand conditions, related and supporting industries, and firm strategy, structure and rivalry, in accordance with Porter's (1990) 'diamond' model. In doing this, we pay close attention to the role of foreign-owned transnational corporations (TNCs) in Ireland in influencing the development and competitive advantage of the indigenous software industry. This is a relevant issue in view of the simultaneous rapid development of the indigenous and foreign-owned branches of the industry, and also the strong growth among other, possibly related, TNC-dominated sectors such as computers and telecommunications equipmen...

91 citations


Authors

Showing all 433 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Richard S.J. Tol11669548587
Mario Coccia7239812366
Marco Vivarelli582659909
Joel W. Grube5419311499
Leslie Daly5423316133
René Kemp5318516666
Mark Wooden493188783
Brian Nolan4836911371
Richard J. T. Klein4712618096
Christopher T. Whelan461896687
Patrick Honohan442349853
Richard Breen4314811007
Richard Layte422127281
Katrin Rehdanz401616453
Emer Smyth391684245
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20231
202219
202178
202084
201991
201891