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 article, the effect of plant and sectoral level characteristics on the provision of training to employees using plant level data for Irish manufacturing is analyzed and no clear evidence that foreign owned plants are more likely to provide training.
Abstract: This paper sets out to analyse the effect of plant and sectoral level characteristics on the provision of training to employees using plant level data for Irish manufacturing. There is no clear evidence that foreign owned plants are more likely to provide training. By contrast, we find that they spend less than domestic plants on training, ceteris paribus. There is also no evidence that plants that receive training grants are more likely to provide training. This may be likely to reflect the targeting of training grants on plants that are otherwise unlikely to provide much training. We do, however, find that training activity in the sector, either by other foreign or domestic plants, has a positive effect on plant level training activity, at least for domestic owned plants.
16 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the comparative response of multinationals and domestic firms to an economic crisis, using the empirical setting of a well defined case of economic slowdown in Chile and find that employment in manufacturing plants has been drastically reduced during the economic crisis.
Abstract: This article examines the comparative response of multinationals and domestic firms to an economic crisis, using the empirical setting of a well defined case of economic slowdown in Chile. We find that employment in manufacturing plants has been drastically reduced during the economic crisis. Our findings reveal that multinationals are more likely to exit contributing to the employment contraction during the crisis, but surviving foreign firms experience lower employment reductions than domestic enterprises. These results are not fully consistent with the idea that multinationals are less affected by an economic crisis and that they may act as stabilisers.
16 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, central bank interventions in times of severe distress (mid-2010), using a unique bond-level dataset of ECB purchases of Greek sovereign debt, have been studied.
Abstract: We study central bank interventions in times of severe distress (mid-2010), using a unique bond-level dataset of ECB purchases of Greek sovereign debt. ECB bond buying had a large impact on the price of short and medium maturity bonds, resulting in a remarkable "twist" of the Greek yield curve. However, the effects were limited to those sovereign bonds actually bought. We find little evidence for positive effects on market quality, or spillovers to close substitute bonds, CDS markets, or corporate bonds. Hence, our findings attest to the power of central bank intervention in times of crisis, but also suggest that in highly distressed situations, this power may not extend beyond those assets actually purchased.
16 citations
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TL;DR: This paper examined the effectiveness of enforcement in reducing corruption and found that strong gums (institutions) are more effective than showing teeth (enforcement employment) or the bite (conviction rates) when it comes to corruption control.
Abstract: Adding a new dimension to determinants of corruption, this paper examines the effectiveness of enforcement in reducing corruption. We compare the influences of latent enforcement (police, judicial, and prosecutorial employment) versus actual enforcement (conviction rates) and enforcing institutions. Results based on data for more than 80 countries show that piecemeal enforcement to combat corruption by increasing enforcement employment is ineffective, rather comprehensive improvements in institutions by strengthening the rule of law or regulatory quality bear greater results. Thus, when it comes to corruption control, strong gums (institutions) are more effective than showing teeth (enforcement employment) or the bite (conviction rates).
16 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the importance of non-market values in understanding supply response and on-farm conservation of traditional maize was discussed, and it was shown that shadow prices better explain the land subsistence farmers allocate to traditional maize in this center of maize diversity.
16 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 |