Institution
Kiel Institute for the World Economy
Facility•Kiel, Germany•
About: Kiel Institute for the World Economy is a facility organization based out in Kiel, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Foreign direct investment & Productivity. The organization has 318 authors who have published 1909 publications receiving 42832 citations. The organization is also known as: Institut für Weltwirtschaft an der Universität Kiel.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarized the insights of an Energy Modeling Forum study on the magnitude and distribution of economic adjustment costs to greenhouse gas emission constraints in the aftermath of the Paris Agreement where countries voluntarily committed themselves to Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs).
21 citations
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TL;DR: It is shown that by integrating a second, asymmetrically dominated choice problem in a random incentive mechanism risk behavior can be manipulated systematically and implies that the isolation hypothesis is violated and therandom incentive mechanism does not elicit true preferences in the authors' example.
Abstract: This paper presents an experimental study of the random incentive mechanisms which are a standard procedure in economic and psychological experiments. Random incentive mechanisms have several advantages but are incentive-compatible only if responses to the single tasks are independent. This is true if either the independence axiom of expected utility theory or the isolation hypothesis of prospect theory holds. We present a simple test of this in the context of choice under risk. In the baseline (one task) treatment we observe risk behavior in a given choice problem. We show that by integrating a second, asymmetrically dominated choice problem in a random incentive mechanism risk behavior can be manipulated systematically. This implies that the isolation hypothesis is violated and the random incentive mechanism does not elicit true preferences in our example.
21 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the importance of global shocks for the global economic developments and national policymakers from a novel perspective is analyzed, focusing on the question whether domestic monetary policies have become less effective in the wake of financial globalisation.
Abstract: This paper analyses the importance of global shocks for the global economic developments and national policymakers from a novel perspective. On the one hand, we examine whether global factors convey additional information about monetary conditions not summarised by national aggregates. More specifically, we keep an eye on the question whether domestic monetary policies have become less effective in the wake of financial globalisation. We adopt a FAVAR framework to derive structural shocks on a worldwide level and their impact on other global and also national variables. We estimate our macromodel using quarterly data from Q1 1984 to Q4 2012 for the G7 countries plus the euro area. According to our results, global liquidity shocks significantly influence the global economy at the commodity price level. However, some other common shocks originating from house prices and GDP play a role at the global level as well.
21 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors exploit data on the exact location of aid projects in Malawi to assess whether the country's bilateral and multilateral donors have acted accordingly at the district and sector level.
Abstract: Acknowledging that aid proliferation and a lack of coordination impair aid effectiveness, donors have repeatedly promised to specialize and better coordinate their aid activities, notably in the Paris Declaration of 2005. We exploit data on the exact location of aid projects in Malawi to assess whether the country's bilateral and multilateral donors have acted accordingly at the district and sector level. We do not find compelling evidence for increased aid specialization after the Paris Declaration, and the regional division of labour among donors may even have deteriorated. Our within-country evidence thus broadly corroborates what previous studies have found at the national level of recipient countries.
21 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the effects of a Financial Transaction Tax (FTT) in an order-driven artificial financial market were investigated and the authors found largely positive effects of the FTT for small tax rates.
Abstract: We investigate the effects of a Financial Transaction Tax (FTT) in an order-driven artificial financial market. FTTs are meant to limit short-term speculative behavior by reducing the amount of excess liquidity in the system. To quantify these effects, adjustments in trading strategies and their effects on liquidity need to be taken into account. We model an agent-based continuous double-auction, allowing for a continuum of investment strategies within the chartist/fundamentalist framework. For certain parameter combinations, our model is able to reproduce certain stylized facts of financial time-series. We find largely positive effects of the FTT for small tax rates. Additionally, for large tax rates we find the effects not to be as negative as previously found.
21 citations
Authors
Showing all 325 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Richard S.J. Tol | 116 | 695 | 48587 |
Axel Dreher | 78 | 350 | 20081 |
Holger Görg | 67 | 367 | 17161 |
J. Edward Taylor | 50 | 210 | 13967 |
Thomas Lux | 49 | 194 | 11041 |
Dennis J. Snower | 47 | 311 | 9689 |
Xinshen Diao | 46 | 251 | 6568 |
Gabriel Felbermayr | 45 | 272 | 6586 |
Peter Nunnenkamp | 42 | 250 | 5711 |
Ansgar Belke | 42 | 536 | 7383 |
Awudu Abdulai | 41 | 156 | 6555 |
Katrin Rehdanz | 40 | 161 | 6453 |
Martin F. Quaas | 39 | 189 | 5628 |
Michael Hübler | 36 | 194 | 4051 |
Mario Larch | 34 | 146 | 4040 |